Gulf War Illness: New Report Lauds Treatment Research, Confirms Toxic Causes
The RAC report updates scientific research published since the Committees landmark report in 2008, which established that Gulf War illness was a real condition, affecting as many as 250,000 veterans of the 1990-91 Gulf War.
The conclusions of the 2008 RAC report had a substantial impact on scientific and clinical thinking about Gulf War illness, as well as the public acceptance of this disorder, said White. The earlier report documented a number of studies that found evidence linking the illness to exposure to pesticides and pyridostigmine bromide (found in anti-nerve gas pills given to troops), as well as other toxic sources.
Studies published since 2008 continue to support the conclusion that Gulf War illness is causally related to chemical exposures in the combat theater, White said of the new report. And many studies of the brain and central nervous system, using imaging, EEG and other objective measures of brain structure and function, add to the existing evidence that central nervous system dysfunction is a critical element in the disorder. Evidence also continues to point to immunological effects of Gulf War illness.
http://www.bu.edu/sph/2014/04/28/gulf-war-illness-new-report-lauds-treatment-research-confirms-toxic-causes/