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BLINDED BY WAR: INJURIES SEND TROOPS INTO
DARKNESS --
"A lot of things went through my mind. Am I going
to be
accepted this way? Am I going to be rejected?"

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http://www.usatod
ay.com/news/military/2007-11-13-eyeinjuries_N.htm
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-------------------------
Blinded by war: Injuries send troops into
darkness
By Gregg Zoroya
USA TODAY
ARLINGTON, Va. — Two days before a 10-mile race
here, Army 1st Lt. Ivan Castro is explaining how he will run tethered to
another soldier — one who can see.
As he speaks, his wife lovingly extends her right hand to Castro's face,
fingers outstretched. But Evelyn Galvis pauses inches away.
"I used to be able to reach out and touch him, caress him, without telling
him first, 'I'm going to touch your face,' " she says. Now, "if I just
reach out and touch him, he'll startle."
Castro, 40, a paratrooper with the 82nd Airborne Division, is one of more
than 1,100 veterans of Iraq and Afghanistan — 13% of all seriously wounded
casualties — to undergo surgery for damaged eyes. That is the highest
percentage for eye wounds in any major conflict dating to World War I,
according to research published in the Survey of Ophthalmology.
It's a reflection of how eye injuries have become one of the most
devastating consequences of a war in which roadside bombs, mortars and
grenades are the most commonly used weapons against U.S. troops. Brain
injuries and amputations have long been the focus of the damage such
weapons are inflicting, but the Army has acknowledged in recent weeks that
serious eye wounds have accumulated at almost twice the rate as wounds
requiring amputations.
Body armor that protects vital organs and the skull is saving lives. But
troops' eyes and limbs remain particularly vulnerable to the blizzard of
shrapnel from such explosions.
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Each explosion unleashes large metal shards and
thousands of fragments, says Army Col. Robert Mazzoli, an ophthalmological
consultant to the Army surgeon general. "Those small missiles are
generally innocuous if they hit the (protected) forehead, face (or) chest
but are devastating when they hit the eye," he says.
Surgical facilities are kept close to the fighting, so troops can be
treated in minutes. Partial or total vision has been restored in most
cases involving eye injuries, military statistics show. But hundreds of
troops have been left with impaired vision, and dozens have been blinded.
Troops in Iraq routinely wear protective eyewear, but it doesn't always
work. When a roadside bomb in Baghdad blew a hole through the heavily
armored vehicle carrying Army Sgt. Luis Martinez last April, the force
from the blast stripped off his helmet, headset and goggles. After the
dust settled, Martinez, 38, could see nothing out of his left eye and only
streaks of blood in his right. He waited for help, terrified about the
damage to his eyes.
"That was the first thing I asked" hospital personnel, the National Guard
soldier recalls. " 'Am I going to be blind?' "
Surgeons later restored vision to his right eye, although bits of glass
are embedded there. He remains blind in his left.
"At least God was kind enough to protect me, to keep my right eye and see
my family," says Martinez, of Vega Alta, Puerto Rico, who is married and
the father of three.
Formidable challenges await troops who return home blind or with serious
eye injuries. In the most severe cases, they will struggle to cope
emotionally and financially.
About 70% of all sensory perception is through vision, says R. Cameron
VanRoekel, an Army major and staff optometrist at Walter Reed Army Medical
Center in Washington. As a result, the families of visually impaired
soldiers wrestle with a contradiction: The wounded often have hard-driving
personalities that have helped them succeed in the military. Now dependent
on others, they find it difficult to accept help.
Because the Pentagon has no rehabilitation services for the blind, the
path to recovery often leads directly to the Department of Veterans
Affairs. The VA operates 10 centers across the country for blind
rehabilitation that teach visually impaired veterans how to function in
society. The centers have 241 beds, and it takes an average of nearly
three months to get in. Iraq and Afghanistan casualties go to the front of
the line, says Stan Poel, VA director of rehabilitation services for the
blind. So far, 53 have enrolled in the blind rehabilitation programs, the
VA says.
The department plans to open three more centers beginning in 2010, Poel
says.
'He has no light in his life'
Even now, more than a year after her husband's return from Iraq, Connie
Acosta is taken aback to find her home dark after sunset, the lights off
as if no one is there.
Then she finds him — sitting in a recliner in their Santa Fe Springs,
Calif., house, listening to classic rock. Sgt. Maj. Jesse Acosta was
blinded in a mortar attack 22 months ago. He doesn't need the lights.
That realization often makes Connie cry. "You kind of never get used to
the fact that he really can't see," she says. "He has no light in his life
at all."
The tiny piece of shrapnel that blinded Acosta, 50, an Army reservist,
father of four and grandfather of three, was precise in its destruction.
On the morning of Jan. 16 last year, Acosta led soldiers on a 3-mile
fitness run across Camp Anaconda in Balad, Iraq. Suddenly, insurgents
attacked the camp with mortars.
Acosta remembers that he stopped, turned to yell at his soldiers and then
dived for cover.
"Bam! That was it," he recalls. "Lights out."
An explosion about 60 feet away sent a piece of shrapnel — perhaps
three-quarters of an inch long — through his left eye. It struck his brain
and came out his right eye.
"It was a perfect hit," Acosta says.
Rushed to the Air Force Hospital at Anaconda, he spent seven hours in
surgery. Army Maj. Raymond Cho, an ophthalmologist, removed Acosta's right
eye and carefully reassembled his left one.
"I didn't want him waking up missing both eyes and wondering for the rest
of his life, 'Gosh, could they have saved at least one?' " Cho says. "So
he knows that we did everything we could."
Acosta regained consciousness as he was being returned to the USA. In
Germany, a doctor told him that his right eye was gone and his left eye,
although stitched together, likely would never see light.
"He said, 'You're going to have to start a whole new life from here on,' "
Acosta recalls.
"I go, 'So I won't be able to see my kids? My grandkids? Nobody? I won't
be able to see blue skies?'
"He said, 'Nope.'
"I just sat there. What could I do?
"A lot of things went through my mind," Acosta says. "Am I going to be
accepted this way? Am I going to be rejected? I was pretty independent all
my life, and I did everything. So it was pretty tough."
VA plans more clinics
Pentagon doctors can rebuild eyes, reconstruct eye sockets and nurse
casualties back to health, but soldiers with serious vision problems who
want to learn how to adapt into civilian life must rely on VA centers that
also serve the elderly and other veterans.
The VA plans to invest $40 million this fiscal year to create 55
outpatient clinics across the nation, providing rehabilitation for
veterans learning to cope with partial vision, says James Orcutt, the VA's
director for ophthalmology.
The department also is taking part in two clinical trials focusing on
artificial vision, says Ronald Schuchard, director of the Atlanta VA
rehabilitation research and development center. The trials involve
implanting silicon chips in eyes. The chips act as receptors that can
transform light into electrical signals that can be transmitted to the
brain. It is cutting-edge research, Schuchard says.
However, Orcutt says, "I think we're a long way from a practical use of
some of these."
At the VA's rehab centers for the blind, specialists teach orientation and
mobility skills. Visually impaired veterans learn to use a white cane,
public transportation and perform daily routines. They also are offered
computer instruction and the use of special scanners for reading text.
They are assessed and treated, if necessary, for psychological
readjustment to their sight loss.
The VA does not provide guide dogs, but it helps link veterans with
guide-dog schools that commonly provide a dog and training virtually free
to veterans, Poel says.
Iraq veterans sometimes find the VA blind rehab programs, which cater
largely to elderly veterans, to be a poor fit for a younger generation.
Army 1st Lt. Castro says he felt somewhat out of place during rehab at a
VA facility in Augusta, Ga.
After the Army sent Jesse Acosta to a VA center for the blind in Palo
Alto, Calif., for rehabilitation in January 2006, he and his wife became
unhappy with the facility, describing it as having a "nursing home"
atmosphere. It is a five-hour drive from his home.
"It did not fit my needs," Acosta says.
He left the VA after a few months and was accepted, free of charge, into
the Junior Blind of America rehab program near his home in Santa Fe
Springs. Last month, he completed training with his new guide dog at The
Seeing Eye school in Morristown, N.J., and now has Charlie, a German
shepherd.
All that is left, Acosta says, is figuring out the rest of his life.
He has fought a medical discharge from the Army until his medical care is
complete. Ultimately, he will earn disability income for his wounds.
Acosta was an energy technician with Southern California Gas before he was
called to active duty.
He is still with the company, though unpaid, and a different job awaits
him — one tailored to his disability, Connie Acosta says. It's unclear
whether Jesse will want it, she says.
"We're hoping for the best," she says. "He's the type that constantly has
to be kept busy. We always have an agenda. I have a calendar going
constantly with things happening."
It begins when they wake, and he wants to know the weather and the color
of the sky, she says. Nothing in the house can be moved; he's memorized
the location of every chair and table.
He has his routines and chores, including weightlifting in the backyard or
fiddling with the fuel pump on the 1969 Dodge Dart. (He fixed it.)
Daughter Brittany, 14, is mustered into duty to operate the computer for
her father until she pleads for a break.
"Taking care of Jesse has been an experience," Connie Acosta says. "He's a
sergeant major in the Army, and they're tough people. He's a tough person
to live with and then, worse, being blind.
"Sometimes, he can be demanding. And I deal with it. I'm used to making
sure that everything's in line. That he's got everything. And that's
basically all I've got to do."
'I want to feel productive'
Castro thought he knew how his life would play out.
A former Army Ranger who had worked his way out of the enlisted ranks to
earn an officer's commission, Castro commanded a scout reconnaissance
platoon and dreamed of becoming a Special Forces team leader.
Instead, the last thing he would ever see was the colorless expanse of an
Iraqi roof in Youssifiyah, Iraq.
A mortar round landed a few feet away from him there on Sept. 2, 2006. The
blast killed two other soldiers from the 82nd Airborne Division and sent
shrapnel tearing into Castro's left side. The explosion damaged a
shoulder, broke an arm, fractured facial bones and collapsed his lungs.
Doctors amputated part of a finger.
The blast also drove the frame of his protective eyewear into his face.
When Castro regained consciousness days later at the National Naval
Medical Center in Bethesda, Md., his wife, Evelyn, sat at his bedside. She
told him his right eye was gone, but doctors hoped to salvage vision in
his left.
The surgeons later removed one last piece of shrapnel from that eye. When
they took off his bandages and flashed a light for Castro to see, he
thought the eye was still covered. "That's when he told me, 'Ivan, you're
not going to be able to see again,' " Castro recalls. "I swore (it was
like) I was standing between the World Trade Center and the two towers had
just come down on my shoulders."
From that moment on, through convalescence and rehabilitation, Castro
would struggle to regain a measure of independence.
Castro has become an advocate of rehabilitation funding for the blind,
visiting members of Congress. After the 10-mile race in October, he ran
the Marine Corps Marathon three weeks later, finishing in 4 hours and 14
minutes.
He concedes that he needs his wife's help. Evelyn Galvis gave up her
career as a bilingual speech pathologist in Fayetteville, N.C., to help
her husband. She supervises his medical care and drives him around.
She guides him through crowds, keeping him aware of raised edges in the
walkway and steps. She reads his menu in restaurants and tells him where
the food sits on the table. She watches him memorize his hotel room,
starting from the doorway and circling within the four walls to keep
account of beds, the tables, the wastebasket, the bathroom.
"My husband used to be a very independent individual," she says.
Castro hopes to stay in the military.
The Army has let several amputees stay in the ranks as well as one blind
captain, who will be an instructor at West Point Military Academy after
completing post-graduate education. Castro awaits word on his future; the
Pentagon won't comment on his situation.
"There's a world in front of me I can't predict or envision because I
haven't been there yet. I haven't lived this yet. I haven't lived blind,"
he says. "All I ask is to stay in the Army and finish out my years … I
want to feel productive."
The only good news for now is when he sleeps, Castro says.
"I've had dreams where I know I'm blind and, guess what? I've regained my
vision," he says. Reality floods back each morning.
"There's not a night that I don't pray and ask God, when I wake up, that I
wake up seeing."
---------------
BRAIN INJURIES ALSO DANGER TO VISION
Glenn Minney lost most of his sight from a combat explosion. But it wasn't
just the injuries to his eyes that cost him his vision it also was damage
to his brain.
Minney, then a Navy corpsman, was wounded when a mortar landed near him in
Haditha, Iraq, in 2005. The blast threw him 30 feet. His back struck a
metal railing, whipping his head backward. He lost his right eye. Vision
in his left eye is impaired from physical injury and brain damage, he
says.
An emerging threat from the fighting in Iraq and Afghanistan is damage to
the brain that affects vision, Pentagon and Department of Veterans Affairs
medical researchers say. This type of injury could mean that there are
thousands of veterans with undiagnosed vision problems, says Tom Zampieri,
of the Blinded Veterans Association.
Doctors didn't find Minney's neurological damage until after he left the
military and was screened for brain injuries by the VA. "The public
doesn't know the true extent of these (brain) injuries," says Minney, 40,
married and the father of two. He's now a patient advocate for the VA in
Frankfort, Ohio.
Concerns about eye injuries have prompted federal legislation that would
create a $5 million Pentagon-based center for research and treatment of
injured eyes. It also would create a registry to track eye wounds.
Minney suffered severe vision loss. Researchers are finding that
less-severe vision problems also can occur among troops who suffer minor
brain concussions from combat, particularly exposure to a blast. "There
are a lot of patients who have suffered mild to moderate brain injuries.
Upon initial examination their eyes looked healthy, but they were still
reporting problems with their vision," says R. Cameron VanRoekel, an Army
optometrist at Walter Reed Army Medical Center in Washington.
Gregory Goodrich, a research psychologist at VA facilities in Palo Alto,
Calif., had similar findings in a study of 101 Iraq and Afghanistan war
veterans with mild traumatic brain injuries. Many are still in the
service.
Goodrich found that 40% to 45% of the patients suffered vision loss even
though their eyes were physically healthy. The biggest problem was an
inability for both eyes to operate precisely together. This can lead to
eye strain and blurred vision.
Left undiagnosed, it can also hamper vocational or educational training
and aggravate depression and post-traumatic-stress disorder, Goodrich
says. Veterans may need an eye care specialist and corrective eyewear, he
says.
But Goodrich fears that routine eye examinations may not uncover the
problems. "In many cases, we're seeing active-duty troops, and they want
to get back and join their units," he says. "So they don't want to hear
that there's something they need to go get treated for."
By Gregg Zoroya
-------------------------
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