http://www.armytimes.com/news/2007/05/military_sarin_gulfwar_070525w/Study: Sarin at root of Gulf War syndrome
By Kelly Kennedy - Staff writer
Posted : Wednesday May 30, 2007 12:08:25 EDT
As benefits administrators, officials and politicians argue the worthiness of studies on Gulf War syndrome, researchers say they have no doubts that they’ve found the root of the problem.
Sarin gas.
And they have advice for as many as 300,000 troops exposed to small doses of sarin in 1991: Don’t use bug spray, don’t smoke and don’t drink alcohol.
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In large enough amounts, PB is harmful, but in small doses it acts to prevent nerve agents from overstimulating muscles, and the effects of PB itself are temporary and reversible.
Exposure to sarin alone would be problematic enough. But for Gulf War veterans, exposure to sarin as well as PB and/or bug repellent may have been what ushered in Gulf War syndrome.
Abou-Donia’s research showed the combination of nerve agents, PB, bug spray and stress could cause any of those chemicals — as well as any lurking viruses — to cross the blood-brain barrier, causing other problems. He said he has no doubt there are other long-term effects of low doses of sarin on other body systems, citing chronic fatigue, muscle weakness and fibromyalgia as symptoms.
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But, he said, there isn’t much that can be done now — although he cautioned Gulf War vets not to use insecticide.
“It’s kind of too late to do much of anything,” he said. “But the body has many redundant systems. Usually, if the damage is small, other neurons will take over. As time goes by, people will adapt.”
A list of units exposed to sarin in the 1991 Gulf War is online here:
http://www.gulflink.osd.mil/forces_in_hazard_00.htm..snip