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From: Steve Wingate <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: IUFO <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; SNETNEWS <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: SNET: Study suggests link between vaccines, Gulf War illnesses
Date: Sunday, April 16, 2000 3:12 AM

->  SNETNEWS  Mailing List

Study suggests link between vaccines, Gulf War illnesses

Copyright © 2000 Nando Media
Copyright © 2000 Associated Press

By JOHN HUGHES, Associated Press

WASHINGTON (April 14, 2000 11:17 p.m. EDT
http://www.nandotimes.com) - A study has found a possible link between
antibodies used in experimental vaccines and unexplained illnesses
afflicting thousands of military personnel who served in the Gulf War.

The Tulane University Medical School study found high levels of antibodies
to squalene in a large percentage of sick veterans vaccinated for Gulf War
service.

Pentagon officials dismiss the study as flawed and say none of the
vaccines administered during the Gulf War contained squalene.

But in response to congressional pressure, the Defense Department late
last month asked the Armed Forces Epidemiological Board to review the
study. The National Academy of Sciences' Institute of Medicine also is
reviewing the research and assessing what, if any role squalene may play
in Gulf illnesses.

"All known, testable hypotheses concerning illnesses among Gulf War
veterans have been or are being pursued," Sue Bailey, the assistant
secretary of defense for health affairs, told Rep. Jack Metcalf, R-Wash., in
a letter last month.

Squalene is a cholesterol-builder in humans and also is found in vegetable
oils, shark liver oil, cosmetics and various health supplements. The
Defense Department and National Institutes of Health in the late 1980s
began researching the use of squalene in vaccines in an effort to make
vaccines more effective.

Defense officials told the General Accounting Office, the investigative arm
of Congress, that they considered - but decided against - using vaccines
with squalene during the Gulf War.

The Tulane study, published in the February issue of Experimental and
Molecular Pathology, found that all but two of 38 sick veterans who served
in the Gulf and received at least one vaccination had elevated squalene
antibodies.

Another six sick veterans who were vaccinated but did not go to the Gulf
produced similar results, according to the study. Those results were
blinded, meaning the researchers did not know the source of blood
samples.

Non-blinded portions of the study found 59 of 86 Gulf War-era veterans,
civilian employees and military contractors tested positive for squalene
antibodies, although it was not known how many of those were vaccinated.

Other groups, including the general public and sick non-veterans with
symptoms similar to Gulf illnesses, rarely tested positive for the antibodies.

The Tulane study offered no conclusions as to whether Gulf War vaccines
contained squalene, what might have produced the squalene antibodies or
what - if any - role the antibodies played in the illnesses.

Still, the research "sets off alarm bells" that should prompt more
investigation into Gulf War vaccines and the safety of vaccines that contain
squalene, said Pam Asa, an immunologist from Memphis, Tenn., and the
lead researcher.

Robert F. Garry, a study author and immunologist at Tulane, said the results
may not point to vaccines containing squalene but that veterans could have
produced the antibodies as the result of receiving so many vaccines at one
time, or from some other organism in a vaccine that may mimic squalene.

Pentagon officials question the study methods, saying researchers did not
verify the validity of their antibody test before they began using it.

"Because I question the method of the test, I have to question all of the
findings," said Lt. Col. John Grabenstein, deputy director of the military's
anthrax vaccine immunization program.

Dr. Julius Cruse, editor and chief of the journal that published the study,
defended the study, saying it was peer-reviewed by 10 to 12 clinicians.

Ten members of Congress, led by Metcalf, want the Pentagon to consider
using the Tulane test on other veterans, saying it could help answer
questions about Gulf illnesses.

The Pentagon says an estimated 90,000 troops who served in the Gulf War
complain of illnesses such as fatigue, skin rashes, headaches and muscle
and joint pain. Defense officials have not ruled out pesticides, stress and
pyridostigmine bromide, an experimental drug given to troops to protect
against the nerve agent soman, as possible contributors to some of the
illnesses.

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

California Director
SKYWATCH INTERNATIONAL

Anomalous Images and UFO Files
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