Author Topic: Brain injury: hidden wound of war  (Read 887 times)

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Lanya

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Brain injury: hidden wound of war
« on: October 28, 2007, 08:09:46 PM »
      
Undiagnosed brain injury - the hidden legacy of Iraq


MoD begins study amid fears that up to 20,000 soldiers may be affected

Matthew Taylor and Esther Addley
Saturday October 27, 2007
The Guardian

The Ministry of Defence is conducting a major study into brain injury in troops returning from Iraq and Afghanistan amid fears that thousands of soldiers may have suffered damage after being exposed to high-velocity explosions.

The US army says as many as 20% of its soldiers and marines have suffered "mild traumatic brain injury" (mTBI) from blows to the head or shockwaves caused by explosions. The condition, which can lead to memory loss, depression and anxiety, has been designated as one of four "signature injuries" of the Iraq conflict by the US department of defence, which is introducing a large-scale screening programme for troops returning from the frontline.

Article continues
Defence officials were reluctant to extrapolate directly from the US experience, arguing that the science is still inconclusive and that the US and UK experience in Iraq and Afghanistan has been different. But the Guardian has learned that the government has put in place a series of measures - including a comprehensive screening process - to deal with what could be a 20-fold increase in troops with mTBI. If the most alarming US predictions are accurate, as many as 20,000 UK troops could be at risk.

Kit Malia, a cognitive rehabilitation therapist who will oversee the programme to treat TBI at Headley Court military rehabilitation centre in Surrey, said: "I think the issue is that we don't know whether the Americans are correct. But if the American figures are correct, this is massive. Absolutely massive."

Surgeon commodore Lionel Jarvis, director of medical policy at the MoD, said the UK is doing all it can to improve diagnosis and treatment of the condition and is "running very, very much in parallel" with the US. He added: "The only significant difference is that there is a much higher political profile on this in the US."

He said the MoD had drawn up a list of measures to help deal with mTBI that included circulating information to all ranks in the field on what symptoms to look out for; plans to screen all service personnel when they return from combat; a four-stage treatment programme at Headley Court; and research into body armour to improve protection for the brain.

Liam Fox, the Conservative defence spokesman, said: "It is a dereliction of duty, a failure of duty of care. They are already well behind the US in terms of identifying this disease. We have to ask again why should US troops be getting better care than British troops?"

The mTBI injury can occur when a soldier gets a blow on the head or is in close proximity to an explosion. The increased use of improvised explosive devices (IEDS) - roadside bombs - in Iraq and Afghanistan means more troops are at risk than in previous conflicts, and experts say that even the most advanced helmets cannot protect the brain from the shock waves.

A US neurologist and former doctor at the US department of veterans affairs, P Steven Macedo, said: "The enemy combatants are not trying to put missiles or bullets into our troops - they are trying to blow up their vehicles with IEDs. But the vehicles and the men wear heavy armour so what goes through them in many cases is the blast wave and we are beginning to see the impact this is having on the neurological make-up of our troops. This is the first war since the first world war where the major cause of injuries is blasts."

Advances in brain scanning have revealed that soldiers can sustain bruising and blood clots on the brain, even if there is no visible injury. If the condition is not diagnosed it can lead to long-term problems - from depression and anxiety to violence and relationship break-up.

Dr Macedo said US army doctors are reporting that up to 20% of soldiers coming home from Iraq have "blast injuries", with 15% of those never recovering. "Someone suffering from this will still be able to use a knife and fork, still be able to talk and walk but they may struggle with bad moods, memory problems or become easily agitated. It is like a computer which is not running programmes properly: you can function but not as quickly or effectively as before."

http://www.guardian.co.uk/military/story/0,,2200330,00.html
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sirs

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Re: Brain injury: hidden wound of war
« Reply #1 on: October 28, 2007, 08:20:53 PM »
Quote
Advances in brain scanning have revealed that soldiers can sustain bruising and blood clots on the brain, even if there is no visible injury. If the condition is not diagnosed it can lead to long-term problems - from depression and anxiety to violence and relationship break-up.

Which of course can happen to ANYONE, especially those involved in serious physical activity, and especially those not wearing a helmet.  Hell, football players are in arguably more situations to receive "hidden wounds on the gridiron", and we won't even touch rugby          ::)
« Last Edit: October 28, 2007, 08:34:07 PM by sirs »
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Lanya

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Re: Brain injury: hidden wound of war
« Reply #2 on: October 28, 2007, 10:57:11 PM »
That is a horribly flip thing to say.  This is an injury that is affecting possibly 20% of our soldiers. 
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sirs

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Re: Brain injury: hidden wound of war
« Reply #3 on: October 29, 2007, 12:07:34 AM »
That is a horribly flip thing to say.  This is an injury that is affecting possibly 20% of our soldiers.  

"Possibly"? and an injury that is NOT unique to our soldiers & their occupation.  As someone in the medical profession, you would think you'd know better
"The worst form of inequality is to try to make unequal things equal." -- Aristotle

Lanya

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Re: Brain injury: hidden wound of war
« Reply #4 on: October 29, 2007, 03:49:26 AM »
"Possibly"?   Yes. Possibly. 

It's stated in the article: The US army says as many as 20% of its soldiers and marines have suffered "mild traumatic brain injury" (mTBI) from blows to the head or shockwaves caused by explosions.

I don't care if it's not unique to soldiers. I am TALKING about soldiers here.  That is the point of this post.  This is a huge percentage who will return and not ever be the same, and I mean physically, neurologically the same.  They are injured. 

Will we pay for their care?  I wonder.  Let's see how many are discharged with "it was a pre-existing condition" and thrown away like trash.
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sirs

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Re: Brain injury: hidden wound of war
« Reply #5 on: October 29, 2007, 04:51:23 AM »
"Possibly"?   Yes. Possibly....I don't care if it's not unique to soldiers. I am TALKING about soldiers here.  That is the point of this post. 

No, the "point of this post" is yet another in a long line of efforts, at trying to paint this war as terrible, and "see, what it's possibly doing to our soldiers?".  News flash Lanya, BAD things happen to people in war.  War IS terrible, and always has been.  Those that "possibly" might have sustained a head injury, are likely MUCH better off than those who have lost arms, legs, spleens, massive sections of intestine, etc., etc., etc.  And I won't even reference those soldiers who are burned alive, mutilated, and/or beheaded.

"The worst form of inequality is to try to make unequal things equal." -- Aristotle

Xavier_Onassis

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Re: Brain injury: hidden wound of war
« Reply #6 on: October 29, 2007, 06:08:55 AM »

No, the "point of this post" is yet another in a long line of efforts, at trying to paint this war as terrible, and "see, what it's possibly doing to our soldiers?".  News flash Lanya, BAD things happen to people in war.  War IS terrible, and always has been.  Those that "possibly" might have sustained a head injury, are likely MUCH better off than those who have lost arms, legs, spleens, massive sections of intestine, etc., etc., etc
================================================================================
All wars are terrible for those who have to fight them.

All the more reason why Juniorbush and Cheney can and should be considered criminal for starting an unnecessary war.

Incompetent, inconsiderate uncompassionate dipsh*ts, both of them.
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BT

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Re: Brain injury: hidden wound of war
« Reply #7 on: October 29, 2007, 11:37:58 AM »
The point is that congress should be proactive and make sure the VA has appropriate funding to track and care for returning veterans who may possibly have mTBI. If my reading is correct this is a hard condition to diagnose. It doesn't present itself the same as a bullet wound or a lost limb. So an education and outreach campaign as well as a tracking mechanism for any soldier involved in IED explosions would need to be funded also.

Perhaps Lanya can report back to us as to the progress the majority party is making concerning this pressing need.