Gulf War illness with or without post-traumatic stress disorder: differential symptoms and immune responses. [PDF]
Nguyen F, Shetty AK.
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FDA-approved cannabidiol [Epidiolex®] alleviates Gulf War Illness-linked cognitive and mood dysfunction, hyperalgesia, neuroinflammatory signaling, and declined neurogenesis. [PDF]
Kodali M +10 more
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Investigating a clinically informed sleep disturbance threshold for physical and mental health among Gulf War Illness veterans. [PDF]
Allen N, Crock L, Chun T, Reinhard MJ.
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PON1 Status in Relation to Gulf War Illness: Evidence of Gene-Exposure Interactions from a Multisite Case-Control Study of 1990-1991 Gulf War Veterans. [PDF]
Steele L +8 more
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Nerve agent exposure and physiological stress alter brain microstructure and immune profiles after inflammatory challenge in a long-term rat model of Gulf War Illness. [PDF]
Cheng CH +9 more
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ABSTRACTGulf War illnesses involve multiple, complex chronic signs and symptoms that loosely fit the clinical criteria for Chronic Fatigue Syndrome/Myalgic Encephalomyelitis (CFS/ME) and/or Fibro-myalgia Syndrome (FMS). Most Gulf War illness patients had multiple exposures: (a) complex chemical mixtures, including organophosphate pesticides, anti-nerve
Garth L. Nicolson +5 more
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Brainstem atrophy in Gulf War Illness
NeuroToxicology, 2020Gulf War Illness (GWI) is a condition that affects about 30 % of veterans who served in the 1990-91 Persian Gulf War. Given its broad symptomatic manifestation, including chronic pain, fatigue, neurological, gastrointestinal, respiratory, and skin problems, it is of interest to examine whether GWI is associated with changes in the brain.
Yu Zhang +9 more
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Cognitive Functioning in Gulf War Illness
Journal of Clinical and Experimental Neuropsychology, 2001A comprehensive neuropsychological battery was administered to 48 veterans with Gulf War Illness (GWI) characterized by severe fatigue (GV-F) and 39 healthy veterans (GV-H). Subjects were matched on intelligence and did not differ on age, gender, race, and alcohol consumption.
G. Lange +7 more
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Fifteen years after the first Gulf War, more than 6000 British veterans of the conflict (11% of those deployed) have developed a variety of disparate, seemingly unrelated, unexplained chronic, enduring, and sometimes disabling physical, cognitive and psychological symptoms.
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