Results 211 to 220 of about 4,081 (244)
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Dysregulation of cellular energetics in Gulf War Illness

Toxicology, 2021
Gulf War Illness (GWI) is estimated to have affected about one third of the Veterans who participated in the first Persian Gulf War. The symptoms of GWI include chronic neurologic impairments, chronic fatigue syndrome, as well as fibromyalgia and immune system disorders, collectively referred to as chronic multi-symptom illness.
Raghavan Pillai, Raju, Alvin V, Terry
openaire   +2 more sources

Gulf War Illnesses: Causation and Treatment

Journal of Occupational & Environmental Medicine, 1999
Soldiers returning from the Gulf War in 1991 described a range of symptoms, including some consistent with the chronic fatigue syndrome, fibromyalgia, and multiple chemical sensitivity. Well-defined adverse health events attributable to service in the Gulf occurred.
M J, Hodgson, H M, Kipen
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Gulf War illness

British Journal of Hospital Medicine, 2005
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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Cognitive Functioning in Gulf War Illness

Journal of Clinical and Experimental Neuropsychology, 2001
A 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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GULF WAR ILLS

Chemical & Engineering News Archive, 2004
THE FINDINGS OF A FEDERAL advisory panel on GulfWar veterans' illnesses have convinced Secretary of Veterans Affairs (VA) Anthony J. Principi to allot $15 million in fiscal 2005 for additional research and to set up a research center to monitor and treat veterans of the 1991 war At a press conference announcing the grants, Principi said the funding was
openaire   +1 more source

Gulf War Illnesses

Psychiatry, 2006
Abstract Many veterans of the 1991 Gulf War have developed unexplained somatic and psychological symptoms and are more likely to suffer chronic ill health than matched control samples. The association between these symptoms and possible causal environmental exposures has been extremely controversial and remains unresolved.
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Gulf War Illnesses: Causes and Controversies

Mayo Clinic Proceedings, 2000
Numerous studies investigating Gulf War illnesses have documented that, while Gulf War veterans are no more likely to die or be hospitalized, they complain of more symptoms than their non-Gulf War counterparts and are more likely to seek medical treatment and disability retirement. Proposed causes include exposure to chemical and microbiological agents
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A Gulf of Difference: Disputes over Gulf War-Related Illnesses

Journal of Health and Social Behavior, 2001
The social discovery of Gulf War-related illnesses, like other occupational and environmental disease, is firmly rooted in ongoing disputes over causation. Pressure from veterans groups, as well as intra-governmental disputes, have driven innovative research directions and challenged the dominant epidemiological paradigm.
P, Brown   +5 more
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Continuing Research into Gulf War Illness

Science, 2001
Evidence supports a link between lasting health problems in some Vietnam veterans and wartime exposure to 2,3,7,8-tetrachlorodibenzo-p-dioxin (2,3,7,8-TCDD) in the defoliant Agent Orange. Martin Enserink, in his News Focus article “Gulf War Illness: The Battle Continues” (2 Feb., p. [812][1]),
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Gulf War illness (GWI) as a neuroimmune disease

Experimental Brain Research, 2017
Gulf War illness (GWI) is a chronic disease characterized by the involvement of several organs, including the brain (Christova et al., Exp Brain Res doi: 10.1007/s00221-017-5010-8 , 2017). In a previous study (Georgopoulos et al., J Neural Eng 4:349-355, 2015), we identified six protective alleles from Class II human leukocyte antigen (HLA) genes, and ...
Apostolos P, Georgopoulos   +5 more
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