Posted on Dec 11, 2015
Blood Test Could Determine Who May Suffer from Gulf War Illness
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http://kstp.com/article/stories/s3988779.shtml
"What they found was groundbreaking. Engdahl and his fellow researchers could determine from person to person by taking blood they could figure out who would suffer from Gulf War Illness with a high degree of accuracy.
How high is the accuracy? About 90 percent.
Engdahl said the breakthrough allows them to help people avoid these illnesses in the future by predicting patterns."
"What they found was groundbreaking. Engdahl and his fellow researchers could determine from person to person by taking blood they could figure out who would suffer from Gulf War Illness with a high degree of accuracy.
How high is the accuracy? About 90 percent.
Engdahl said the breakthrough allows them to help people avoid these illnesses in the future by predicting patterns."
Edited 9 y ago
Posted 9 y ago
Responses: 8
When I was in college I traveled home with a friend so we could deer hunt over the weekend. I had only been in the Navy at the time. My friend said we were going to go to a party Friday night and then hunt Sat morning. We got there and I met several of his friends. One of the people I met was a former Marine. We hit it off. He was sitting down when we met. He was telling war stories from the Gulf War and I was listening intently.
At some point he gets up to go get another beer. He has to hobble to the fridge favoring one leg. When he returns I asked him if he was injured in the war. Then the real story started. He was not injured. He had been in the area where they had destroyed a lot of SCUDs. When he returned home. he got a boil on his upper leg the boil got bigger and bigger. The doctors did not know what was going on. Before it was all over they had removed most of his quadriceps on his right leg. Because of this they discharged him. At the time the VA did not recognize Gulf War Syndrome and he was getting nothing for his injuries.
I spent the next day in a tree stand thinking of how our government had let this guy down and wondering how many more were suffering though this same thing.It was very surreal. I never saw him again, but it made a mark on me.
At some point he gets up to go get another beer. He has to hobble to the fridge favoring one leg. When he returns I asked him if he was injured in the war. Then the real story started. He was not injured. He had been in the area where they had destroyed a lot of SCUDs. When he returned home. he got a boil on his upper leg the boil got bigger and bigger. The doctors did not know what was going on. Before it was all over they had removed most of his quadriceps on his right leg. Because of this they discharged him. At the time the VA did not recognize Gulf War Syndrome and he was getting nothing for his injuries.
I spent the next day in a tree stand thinking of how our government had let this guy down and wondering how many more were suffering though this same thing.It was very surreal. I never saw him again, but it made a mark on me.
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SSG Harry Outcalt
Don't take this the wrong way , but did he show you the leg ? .It takes a lot for a boil to get to the point of muscle removal as in that's a lot for an over grown pimple....
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Good news...now that it can be determined, the question is WHAT is it? and how to cure it and how to prevent it.
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CPT (Join to see)
Thanks for sharing. I'll share this with my brothers who fought in the Gulf War.
Thanks for sharing. I'll share this with my brothers who fought in the Gulf War.
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