TY - JOUR
T1 - Gulf War veterans and Iraqi nerve agents at Khamisiyah
T2 - Postwar hospitalization data revisited
AU - Smith, Tyler C.
AU - Gray, Gregory C.
AU - Weir, J. Christopher
AU - Heller, Jack M.
AU - Ryan, Margaret A.K.
N1 - Funding Information:
The authors thank Michael A. Dove and Scott L. Seggerman from the Management Information Division, Defense Manpower Data Center, Seaside, California, for providing Gulf War veteran deployment data. They also thank Jeff Kirkpatrick, Warren Wortman, Veronique Haus-child, and Mark Walter from the Deployment Environmental Surveillance Program of the US Army Center for Health Promotion and Preventive Medicine, Aberdeen Proving Ground, Maryland, and Richard Harrington, Col. Michael Abreu, Larry Sipos, and Dr. Michael Kilpatrick from the Deployment Health Support Directorate (formerly Office of Special Assistant for Gulf War Illnesses), for providing troop location, exposure data, and critical review. The authors appreciate the support of Dr. Gary Gackstetter and Dr. Tomoko Hooper of the Uniformed Services University of Health Sciences, Bethesda, Maryland, and the support of the Henry M. Jackson Foundation for the Advancement of Military Medicine, Rockville, Maryland.
Funding Information:
This represents report 02-12, supported by the Department of Defense, under work unit no. 60002.
PY - 2003/9/1
Y1 - 2003/9/1
N2 - Chemical warfare agents were demolished by US soldiers at Khamisiyah, Iraq, in March 1991. The authors investigated postwar morbidity for Gulf War veterans, contrasting those who may have been exposed to low gaseous levels of nerve agents and those unlikely to have been exposed. Cox regression modeling was performed for hospitalizations from all causes and hospitalizations from diagnoses within 15 categories during the period March 10, 1991, through December 31, 2000, for the duration of active-duty status. After adjustment for all variables in the model, only two of 37 models suggested that personnel possibly exposed to subclinical doses of nerve agents might be at increased risk for hospitalization from circulatory diseases, specifically cardiac dysrhythmias. Of the 724 hospitalizations for cardiac dysrhythmias, 203 were in the potentially exposed group, slightly higher than expected (risk ratio = 1.23, 95% confidence interval: 1.04, 1.44). The increase was small in comparison with potential observational variability, but the findings are provocative and warrant further evaluation. Veterans possibly exposed to nerve agents released by the Khamisiyah demolition were not found to be at increased risk for hospitalizations from any other chronic diseases nearly 10 years after the Gulf War.
AB - Chemical warfare agents were demolished by US soldiers at Khamisiyah, Iraq, in March 1991. The authors investigated postwar morbidity for Gulf War veterans, contrasting those who may have been exposed to low gaseous levels of nerve agents and those unlikely to have been exposed. Cox regression modeling was performed for hospitalizations from all causes and hospitalizations from diagnoses within 15 categories during the period March 10, 1991, through December 31, 2000, for the duration of active-duty status. After adjustment for all variables in the model, only two of 37 models suggested that personnel possibly exposed to subclinical doses of nerve agents might be at increased risk for hospitalization from circulatory diseases, specifically cardiac dysrhythmias. Of the 724 hospitalizations for cardiac dysrhythmias, 203 were in the potentially exposed group, slightly higher than expected (risk ratio = 1.23, 95% confidence interval: 1.04, 1.44). The increase was small in comparison with potential observational variability, but the findings are provocative and warrant further evaluation. Veterans possibly exposed to nerve agents released by the Khamisiyah demolition were not found to be at increased risk for hospitalizations from any other chronic diseases nearly 10 years after the Gulf War.
KW - Exposure, environmental
KW - Exposure, occupational
KW - Hospitalization
KW - Military medicine
KW - Morbidity
KW - Persian Gulf syndrome
KW - Veterans
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U2 - 10.1093/aje/kwg178
DO - 10.1093/aje/kwg178
M3 - Article
C2 - 12936901
AN - SCOPUS:0042510806
SN - 0002-9262
VL - 158
SP - 457
EP - 467
JO - American journal of epidemiology
JF - American journal of epidemiology
IS - 5
ER -