http://www.duluthsuperior.com/mld/duluthsuperior/news/nation/8817831.htmPosted on Wed, Jun. 02, 2004
Brain trauma takes toll on soldiersBY JOHN SIMERMAN
Knight Ridder Newspapers
PALO ALTO, Calif. - (KRT) - Alec Giess clicked off an episode of "M*A*S*H*" and rose gingerly from his hospital bed, carrying nothing but the dull, merciless pain on the right side of his head.
"Punch drunk," is how the Oregon National Guardsman describes the muddle in his brain.
Rigoberto Oceguera feels that way, too. Sometimes, the 22-year-old Army specialist cries for no reason. Just bursts out in tears. He also found God, though he can't quite explain how or why.
Their new duty station, in military parlance, is here at the Veterans Administration hospital, in one of four VA traumatic brain injury sites nationwide.
Here come the invisibly damaged, those with brains that, as Oceguera puts it, "get confused and start wobbling around." Their numbers are growing.
The swelling toll of dead and wounded U.S. soldiers has the Palo Alto center bracing for more with traumatic brain injuries. Last week, the center was directed to add beds to meet the demand.
Traumatic brain injuries are nothing new in war zones. But Iraq is producing a higher rate of returning wounded than previous wars, military medical officials say. At Walter Reed Army Medical Center alone, doctors have identified more than 280 cases of traumatic brain injury in the past year, most from Iraq.