-Caveat Lector-

Gulf War syndrome linked to enzyme level

Copyright © 1999 Nando Media
Copyright © 1999 Associated Press

By TROY GOODMAN

DALLAS (June 21, 1999 12:10 a.m. EDT http://www.nandotimes.com) -
Soldiers born with low levels of an enzyme that helps the body fight off
chemical toxins are more likely to report symptoms of Gulf War syndrome
than soldiers born with normal levels, according to a new study published in
Toxicology and Applied Pharmacology.

The authors say the small-scale study of 46 Gulf War veterans is the first to
suggest a genetic marker to explain why some soldiers got sick from
possible exposure to toxic nerve agents, possibly in combination with
pesticides.

Thousands of veterans returned from the 1990-91 war in the Middle East
complaining of chronic, unexplained health woes. The veterans said they
are experiencing confusion, memory loss and balance problems. Others
said they have pain in their neck, shoulders and hips, the researchers said.

"Now we know that there's a genetic reason why some of these guys got
sick and others didn't," said Dr. Robert Haley, the chief of epidemiology at
the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas and the
study's author.

His findings, which appeared in the June 16 issue of Toxicology and
Applied Pharmacology, are based on a larger 1997 study of a Naval
Mobile Construction Battalion, or Seabees.

Haley, with assistance from Dr. Bert La Du and Scott Billecke from the
University of Michigan Medical School, investigated how the Seabees'
genes produced an enzyme in their bodies that naturally protect them from
toxins. Those born with low levels of the protective enzyme - called type Q
paraoxonase, or PON-Q - were the ones who reportedly got sick.

Twenty-one of the 26 sick Seabees in the study had below average or
extremely low PON-Q levels in their blood. Haley said the enzyme levels
are constant throughout a person's life and likely wouldn't be lowered
because of illness.

"The PON gene is a good candidate" for signaling neurological damage
resulting from chemical or nerve gas exposure, said Dr. Simon Wessely, a
Gulf War researcher at King's College at the University of London, who was
not involved with the study. "But any findings like this must be regarded as
preliminary."

Haley agreed, calling his findings a "highly refined hypothesis."

"We spent $3 million on these 46 guys and so we've been able to measure
the things that are likely to be the cause of their illness," Haley said. "Now
it's time to move on."

The Department of Defense and the Perot Foundation provided funding for
the study.

Haley and Wessely both noted that larger studies are under way to
examine the link between PON levels and war-related illness.

More than 697,000 Americans served in the Gulf War that succeeded in
driving Iraqi forces out of Kuwait in 1991.

Sick veterans suggest they were exposed to chemical pollutants from
burning oil fields, insecticides or inoculations to protect them from germ
warfare. They also say they were possibly exposed to Iraqi chemical or
biological weapons, infectious diseases and depleted uranium used in
artillery shells.

The Pentagon asserts there's no conclusive evidence to support those
claims but says it has not ruled out chemical or environmental explanations
and continues to investigate.

In January, a large study of British troops found that soldiers who served in
the Gulf War do have a rate of general ill health - at least two times as high
as troops who went to Bosnia and soldiers who stayed home.

But that study by Wessely and others cautioned that there was no single
"syndrome" among the ill soldiers.

Haley's previous research on a small number of patients concluded that
some Gulf War veterans suffer from distinct symptom clusters caused by
chemical poisoning and that some may have suffered neurological damage
from nerve gas or pesticides.

------------------------------------------------------------------------
Steve Wingate

California Director
SKYWATCH INTERNATIONAL

Anomalous Images and UFO Files
http://www.anomalous-images.com

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