Chemicals Sickened '91 Gulf War Veterans, Latest Study Finds
Tron Nick
New Study finds Gulf War syndrome 'does exist'
Scientists in the US say they have demonstrated the existence of the illness known as "Gulf war syndrome". The findings are in a report by the influential Research Advisory Committee on Gulf war veterans' illness, leaked to the New York Times.. The study has broken with several earlier studies and concluded that many suffer from neurological damage caused by exposure to toxic chemicals, rejecting past findings that the ailments resulted mostly from wartime stress. Citing new scientific research on the effects of exposure to low levels of neurotoxins, the Research Advisory Committee on Gulf War Veterans' Illnesses concludes in its draft report that "a substantial proportion of Gulf War veterans are ill with multisymptom conditions not explained by wartime stress or psychiatric illness." It says a growing body of research suggests that many veterans' symptoms have a neurological cause and that there is a "probable link" to exposure to neurotoxins. The report says possible sources include sarin, a nerve gas, from an Iraqi weapons depot blown up by American forces in 1991; a drug, pyridostigmine bromide, given to troops to protect against nerve gas; and pesticides used to protect soldiers in the region. [more ]
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