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WASHINGTON,
July 23 (UPI) -- Nearly two-thirds of injured U.S. soldiers sent
from Iraq to Walter Reed Army Medical Center have been diagnosed
with traumatic brain injuries -- a percentage thought to be higher
than any other past U.S. conflict, military officials told United
Press International.
About
60 to 67 percent of soldiers coming through the hospital with wounds
as well as injuries from blasts, severe falls and motor vehicle
accidents have suffered these potentially life-altering brain
injuries, said Dr. Deborah Warden, national director of the Defense
and Veterans Brain Injury Center at Walter Reed, where the majority
of patients with suspected head injuries from Iraq are sent.
Warden
said this trend may seem grim but the increased number of cases
actually serves as proof of an improved head injury survival rate
from better armor, more sophisticated diagnostic tools, and soldiers
and medical staff better trained to look for and treat these kinds
of injuries that would have been fatal or gone unnoticed in past
wars.
An
ongoing investigation into the lifelong effects of war-related head
injuries is at the forefront of these advancements in knowledge and
treatment.
"As
a medical field, we're much more sensitized to mild, closed brain
injury ... and we know that there are consequences and ramifications
for milder traumatic brain injury," Warden told UPI. "So
we are screening and identify soldiers who have had less severe
traumatic brain injury," which was not the case in Vietnam or
earlier wars.
With
the development of more sophisticated body armor and helmets made of
Kevlar -- a bullet resistant material -- the survival rate of
soldiers with traumatic brain injuries has greatly improved, whereas
in past wars similar injuries would have been fatal, Warden
explained.
She
said soldiers who survive head injuries often suffer from a range of
cognitive and emotional problems, including difficulty with memory,
attention and reasoning, as well as high rates of depression,
alcohol use, post-traumatic anxieties and irritability.
During
the Vietnam era, brain-scanning technology, such as magnetic
resonance imaging, did not exist to detect the extent of brain
injuries, said Dr. Karen Schwab, assistant director at the Walter
Reed brain injury center. This likely resulted in under-detection of
traumatic head injury and inadequate treatment, she added.
This
led to the beginning of a long-term investigation studying the
effects of penetrating brain injuries on Vietnam veterans. A
penetrating brain injury is one where a bullet or piece of shrapnel
has passed through the skull and pierced the brain. The study is now
entering its third phase of research at the National Naval Medical
Center in Bethesda, Md.
The
study was started in the 1960s at Walter Reed by Dr. William
Caveness, who wanted to investigate how penetrating head injuries
affected epilepsy in soldiers -- who had a high incidence rate of
the disease, said Jordan Grafman, chief of cognitive neuroscience at
the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke and the
study's principal investigator.
Grafman
and fellow investigator, Dr. Andres Salazar, wanted to expand the
scope of the investigation to learn more about cognition and brain
function, yielding results that improved the evaluation of patients
with head injuries and identified key components to their long-term
outcomes.
"If
you have a brain injury and you can no longer do a specific task
then it is likely that that area of the brain was very important --
perhaps stored the memories that enabled you to do that task,"
Grafman told UPI.
"We
knew the patients' long-term outcome was going to depend a lot more
on their cognitive status than it would on whether they had epilepsy
or not," Grafman continued. "And we probably would learn a
whole lot about how the brain works and help the military change how
they handle head injuries because during Vietnam there was no real
standard of care."
In
the early 1980s, the Department of Defense granted funding for the
second phase of the study, to conduct a 15-year follow-up evaluation
of 520 Vietnam veterans with head injuries who had participated in
the first phase of research.
The
investigation led to many neuropsychological advances that proved
the importance of the prefrontal cortex in social functioning, and
showed the Army that veterans with head injuries still experienced
cognitive deficits -- in social behavior, reasoning, attention and
planning -- that needed effective diagnosis and rehabilitation.
"We
were able to see that many of these guys were not worked up or
evaluated well after Vietnam, which led to new (head injury) units
being established in military hospitals," Grafman said.
"It also got the military, especially the Army, just extremely
interested in head injuries in general and trying to figure out ways
to minimize injuries when they occur medically or even prevent them
by changing the helmet. So it had a powerful clinical impact."
The
development of better helmets has reduced the number of penetrating
head injuries in Iraq, but internal, concussive head injuries are
more of a problem in this war, Warden said, particularly among
paratroopers injured by rough landings.
The
brain injury center has worked with the Army to develop even better
helmets that provide more internal cushioning to prevent against
concussions. These helmets currently are being integrated into
service, Warden said.
Despite
"great improvements in body protection," however, the head
still is the most vulnerable part of the body to injury, Grafman
said, so even though shells and fragments might be blocked, that
still will not prevent traumatic injuries to the brain through
weaponry that causes damage by impact and sound waves.
"Given
this, it becomes even more important to better evaluate and provide
good rehabilitation for soldiers," he added.
The
third phase of the study currently under way at the NNMC could
provide important clues to improved rehabilitation by "looking
at cognition in a slightly more sophisticated way," said Dr.
Vanessa Raymont, NNMC's head neuropsychiatrist.
The
30-year follow-up of the same Vietnam veterans will evaluate more
social and everyday cognition, Raymont said, by focusing on how
these injuries continue to affect executive functioning in the
brain, including decision-making and reasoning.
This
part of the study also will involve a genetic analysis of blood
samples from participating veterans to see if there are any specific
genetic markers indicating some soldiers might be more susceptible
to developing problems from these types of injuries, Raymont said.
Although
the study has covered only 12 veterans since its launch last April,
Raymont said preliminary reports suggest a higher incidence of
short-term memory problems, which may indicate people with head
injuries are more prone to memory difficulties.
Psychological
problems also seem to continue for many participants who suffer from
depression and anxiety disorders and use alcohol to cope with the
problems they have experienced, she said.
This
study focuses on penetrating head injuries instead of internal ones
more prevalent in current conflict, Raymont said, "(so) it is
very feasible we could be looking at different outcomes" for
veterans of the Vietnam war and the war in Iraq.
Grafman
said the study's findings still will help soldiers in Iraq know what
to expect with these injuries and will drive the importance of
long-term rehabilitation.
"In
the case of more blast injuries, it is likely they're going to
affect more widespread parts of the brain than the typical shell
fragment would," Grafman explained. "The more we learn
about individual areas of the brain and how they function, the more
knowledge we'll have about the kind of impairments that can
occur" and more specified and effective treatments can be
developed.
Treatment
already is improving for brain injury sufferers, Schwab said.
"Clinicians
tell us here, that when people are brought back for follow-up a year
after their treatment, how well they're doing. It's
impressive," she said. "People continue to make recovery,
which is not to minimize their injuries when in fact a lot of them
will need ongoing help."
The
study will conduct a fourth phase in another 10 to 15 years to
further examine long-term effects on these veterans.
Comment: There are
over ten thousand wounded Gis,
hidden in hospitals here and in Germany and over a thousand dead.
Both the families of the dead and the damaged can thank George Bush
for the havoc and tragedy his actions have created with the lives of
so many Americans.
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