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Scientists: Brain Injuries From War Worse Than Thought
Gregg Zoroya, USA Today
September 24, 2007
Scientists
trying to understand traumatic brain injury from bomb blasts are
finding the wound more insidious than they once thought.
They find that even when there are no outward signs
of injury from the blast, cells deep within the brain can be altered,
their metabolism changed, causing them to die, says Geoff Ling, an
advance-research scientist with the Pentagon.
The new findings are the result of blast experiments
in recent years on animals, followed by microscopic examination of
brain tissue. The findings could mean that the number of brain-injured
soldiers and Marines - many of whom appear unhurt after exposure to a
blast - may be far greater than reported, says Ibolja Cernak, a
scientist with the Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Laboratory.
This cellular death leads to symptoms that may not
surface for months or years, Cernak says. The symptoms can include
memory deficit, headaches, vertigo, anxiety and apathy or lethargy.
"These soldiers could have hidden injuries with long-term
consequences," he says.
Physicians and scientists are calling TBI the
"signature wound" of the Iraq war because of its increasing prevalence
among troops.
In the animal studies, scientists say they have
found a fundamentally different wound than the "brain concussion"
historically associated with undetected brain injuries. A concussion,
essentially a bruise on the brain, is a wound that can heal over time,
doctors say.
The newly discovered brain damage at the cellular
level can be permanent - especially after repeated exposures to blasts
- and lead to lasting neurological deterioration, Ling and Cernak say.
Military and civilian scientists worry whether a
generation of servicemembers could emerge from the Iraq and Afghanistan
wars with some form of brain damage steadily more severe.
Hidden Injuries
Army Sgt. Gary Boggs may be such a case. When he was
wounded by a roadside bomb in Iraq in 2003, doctors believed his worst
injury was a blinded left eye, along with shrapnel wounds to his left
arm and ruptured eardrums.
No one spoke of brain damage during his hospital
treatment and convalescence. Boggs said he never considered the
possibility until he took a medical retirement from the Army and
started a job this year as a financial adviser. Boggs couldn't keep up
with a job-study program, forgetting paragraphs he had just read.
"It was really getting hard for me," says Boggs, 32,
of Melbourne Beach, Fla. "I finally swallowed my pride and asked for
help from the VA (Department of Veterans Affairs). I said, 'I think
something is wrong with me.'"
He was diagnosed with mild traumatic brain injury and receives medication to focus his thoughts.
Brain injury experts such as Cernak fear Boggs may be at the front of a new wave of TBI victims.
Cernak's research on blast-related brain injury
dates back to the study of wounded soldiers in her native homeland of
the former Yugoslavia during the Balkans conflict of the 1990s.
It was in the Balkans where Cernak first discovered
that soldiers exposed to blasts who suffered no apparent head wounds
displayed brain damage symptoms over a period of months or more than a
year.
"You can give her credit for being a pioneer," Ling says.
Can't Be Detected With Imaging Tests
When the war in Iraq began, clinicians treating the
wounded began noticing similar symptoms. Some screenings at military
bases showed that 10% to 20% of returning troops may have suffered such
head wounds.
"We've had patients who have been in a blast, who we
tested. They looked OK. And they came back later, and they were not
OK," says Maria Mouratidis, head of brain injury treatment at the
National Naval Medical Center in Bethesda, Md.
To make matters worse, whatever damage occurred was
so microscopic that it could not be found with imaging tests.
"This is a new beast," says Alisa Gean, a San
Francisco-based traumatic brain injury specialist who treated soldiers
this year at an Army hospital in Germany.
The microscopic damage changes brain cell
metabolism, Cernak says, creating a cascading effect that leads to the
premature aging and death of neurons that cannot be replaced.
In a presentation before a committee of the National
Academy of Sciences last month, Cernak said the damage was caused by
the blast pressure wave, an invisible surge of compressed air traveling
near the speed of sound. Kinetic energy from this pressure wave ripples
through the body, injuring brain cells, Cernak said.
All of this occurs in less than a second after the
blast, she said. Moreover, she said, body armor is no protection
against this blast wave.
Ling says other factors can contribute to TBI, not
just pressure. "Pressure is our leading candidate for no other reason
than it is the one we've studied the most," he says. "We are playing
catch-up."
Concerned about the potential number of wounded,
Congress this year authorized $150 million for brain injury research in
an emergency spending bill passed in May for the Iraq and Afghanistan
wars.
Repeated Exposure to Blame?
Roadside bombs, also called improvised explosive
devices (IEDs), are the cause of most cases of brain injury and account
for almost 80% of all wounds to U.S. troops. Many troops caught near
these explosions can suffer symptoms such as perforated eardrums,
ringing in the ears, blurred vision, memory lapses and headaches.
Soldiers often shake off the effects and return to combat.
Iraq and Afghanistan veterans treated by the
Department of Veterans Affairs say they have been exposed to anywhere
from six to 25 bomb blasts during their combat experiences, says
Barbara Sigford, VA director of physical medicine. Ling and other
scientists say repeated blast exposure can aggravate any brain damage.
Pentagon medical policy analysts have grappled with
the idea of pulling troops out of combat after being exposed to
multiple blasts.
However, the science is too preliminary for such a
dramatic change in policy, says Army Col. Tony Carter, one of those
analysts.
"If (soldiers) could have damage and they were
otherwise functionally OK, but the damage could show up much later,
then essentially what we would be saying is, 'Anybody exposed to blast
leaves theater,'" Carter says.
"That would be very, very difficult to do. You don't
know (how many blast exposures are too many). Half a dozen? One? I
mean, what's the tipping point?"
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