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BRAIN INJURIES ARE LEGACY OF IRAQ WAR -- One in nine
deployed U.S. soldiers affected. "It's very
difficult to diagnose.
Treatment generally is providing medications to
alleviate
symptoms or trying to stop the progression of
impairment."

Spc. Brandon Meyer, left, and Sgt.
Rob Wentworth stand with Rick Briggs of the Brain Injury Association
of Michigan. Meyer and Wentworth were injured by improvised
explosive devices in Iraq. (photo: Jose Juarez / Journal Register
News Service) |
For more about traumatic brain injury, use the VA
Watchdog search engine...click here...
http://www.yourvabenefits.org/sessearch.php?q=traumatic+brain&op=ph
Story here...
http://www.dailytribune.com/stories/010208/loc_wounded.shtml
Story below:
-------------------------
Brain injuries are legacy of Iraq War
One in nine deployed U.S. soldiers affected.
By Jerry Wolfe
Journal Register News Service
To many people, Army Sgt. Rob Wentworth wouldn't be considered very lucky
- he suffered multiple back, leg, knee and ankle wounds and a traumatic
brain injury in the Iraq war.
But Wentworth, 28, of Farmington Hills, says he's fortunate to have
survived when a 2,000-pound bomb in a vehicle was detonated by a suicide
bomber north of Tikrit on June 25, about 120 feet from where he was
working on guard duty.
One in every nine American soldiers deployed to Iraq suffers a traumatic
brain injury, according to Department of Defense figures, said Rick
Briggs, a retired Air Force major who runs the veterans program at the
Brain Injury Association of Michigan, based in Brighton.
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This fact was echoed by Dr. Evan Kanter, a staff
physician for the Department of Veteran Affairs, who wrote in a November
study by Physicians for Social Responsibility, titled "Shock and Awe Hits
Home," that "as many as 30 percent of injured soldiers have suffered some
degree of traumatic brain injury."
'Very difficult to diagnose'
Wentworth was standing behind a 12-foot-high cement wall, when the blast
occurred. The force of the explosion picked up the 6-foot, 206-pound
Wentworth and threw him 25 feet through a large metal sliding door.
Before Wentworth could check to see if he was injured, he came under
attack near Bayji, Iraq. The attack killed dozens of Iraqis in the area.
Wentworth is just one of the estimated 28,451 American soldiers injured in
the war, which began in March 2003, months after Wentworth joined the
service Aug. 21, 2002.
Department of Defense figures show that since the war in Iraq began, 3,918
American soldiers have died there. So far, 18 soldiers from Oakland County
have died in either Iraq or Afghanistan.
A traumatic brain injury can leave the victim in a lifelong coma or with
milder symptoms such as short-term memory loss or headaches, said Dr.
Robert Spitzer, a Beaumont Hospital neurologist.
"It's very difficult to diagnose," Spitzer said. "Treatment generally is
providing medications to alleviate symptoms or trying to stop the
progression of impairment."
Wentworth's brain injury left him with short-term memory loss, migraine
headaches, dizziness, stuttering and insomnia. He is undergoing physical
therapy.
In addition, Wentworth, who was deployed to Iraq in November 2006,
advocates for proper treatment of soldiers who have suffered brain
injuries in the war, Briggs said.
The cost of treating someone with a traumatic brain injury can range as
high as $5 million during a lifetime, said Briggs, who was in Operation
Desert Shield in 1990, when Coalition forces pushed the late Saddam
Hussein's army out of Kuwait.
Wentworth recalled the moments after the blast blew him through the door.
"After I went through the garage door, I got up," Wentworth said. "I was
looking for my buddy. I took two steps and was hit in the head by a
2-foot-long piece of steel falling back down from the sky.
"It hit me flat on the head and threw me down," Wentworth added. "I was
looking for the other guy pulling guard duty and realized what was going
on. The blast was followed by machine gun fire and RPGs (rocket propelled
grenades) being shot at us.
"The bomb destroyed a massive amount of the building."
Wentworth said that, a few hours after the explosion, "the adrenaline wore
off and I told my squad leader I wasn't feeling so well." He was sent to a
battalion medical aid station.
"I walked in and said my back hurts," he said. "I collapsed on a stretcher
and couldn't get up after that. They pumped me full of morphine, did
X-rays," and he was sent to a contingency operating base, "a large
American base in Iraq, for a CAT scan of my back."
"(Doctors said) I had possible cracked vertebrae. I was in the hospital by
the next day," Wentworth said.
He was then flown to Speicher, a large U.S. base near Tikrit, for other
tests. He then went back on missions after being released from Speicher.
Then, Wentworth started having symptoms and was sent to Balad, Iraq, where
there was a U.S. base.
A few weeks later, as his symptoms intensified, Wentworth was shipped to
Landstuhl, Germany, where there was a U.S. medical Army hospital and "I
was diagnosed with TBI (traumatic brain injury)."
"I didn't want to leave," Wentworth said of being sent out of Iraq. "I
promised my guys I'd keep them alive."
Wentworth is assigned to the Community Based Health Care Organization. The
military sends soldiers with brain injuries home to be rehabilitated.
Michael Harris, the executive director of the Michigan Paralyzed Veterans
of America, based in Novi, said there's an unusually high ratio of
injured-to-killed in the Iraq war.
Harris worries the Department of Veterans Affairs won't have the resources
to take care of the injured soldiers from the Iraq war. The "Shock and Awe
Hits Home" study estimated that health care for Iraq war veterans could
top $650 billion during the lifetimes of the soldiers.
"This report should serve as a wake-up for Americans and the (Bush)
administration," Kanter said in the report.
"While we endlessly debate what we are gaining in Iraq, hundreds of
thousands of soldiers and their families are falling victim to death,
post-war trauma and lifelong struggles with mental and physical wounds as
a legacy of this war," Kanter, a psychiatrist who is a clinical assistant
professor at the University of Washington, wrote in the study.
The Brain Injury Association of Michigan is trying to inform the public of
the scope and seriousness of traumatic brain injuries.
Briggs said part of the role of the association is to hold seminars and
conduct "pre-homecoming" and post-deployment" briefings.
A post-deployment briefing occurs 60 to 90 days after a soldier returns
home.
Traumatic brain injury and post-traumatic stress disorders are similar and
often are misdiagnosed, he added.
The determination can be made by special screening tests such as a CAT
scan, in which doctors look for physiological damage to a soldier's brain.
However, Spitzer said there often is no physical evidence of a traumatic
brain injury.
Some 63 percent to 80 percent of combat-injured veterans who were
hospitalized also have suffered brain injuries, Briggs said.
"So, that means at least two out of three injuries have a TBI component
with them. Wounded warriors don't get better overnight."
Wentworth is working on getting healthy.
"I do physical therapy and exercise," he said. "Lately, I've developed
migraine headaches."
He also has support from his family, something essential for wounded
warriors.
"We're a pretty close family," Wentworth's mother, Michelle, said of Rob
and his brothers, Andrew, 26, and Richard, 22, and her husband, Bob. "One
thing I find frustrating is that it takes so long to rehab," she said. "We
hope he will make a 100 percent recovery. We're worried about all the guys
not getting diagnosed (with TBI)."
Michell Wentworth said parents of soldiers with brain injuries should help
their children take advantage of all the help available to them. "Tell the
parents to be advocates," she added. "Don't stop until you get all the
help you can get. The help is there. It's just hard sometimes to put your
finger on it."
Part of Wentworth's current mission is to help other injured soldiers. "If
they're home after deploying and having problems, then I tell them to get
some help," Wentworth said. "Go to the Brain Injury Association of
Michigan, the VA. Don't stop until you find someone that understands your
issue.
"I don't have any plans to be 99.9 percent recovered," Wentworth said. "I
hope to get to 100 percent. I plan to be 110 percent after I'm finished
(with) therapy. I'm planning to be better than I was."
Michigan is fortunate to have 55 accredited rehabilitation facilities that
can help injured soldiers such as Wentworth recover, Briggs said. By
comparison, Missouri has two, and California, usually at the forefront of
rehabilitation services, has five
"We're working diligently to get our massive health care provider network
to augment the VA and Department of Defense TBI health care system," said
Briggs.
"A lot of the people get better," Spitzer said. "I think there's the
feeling that nothing can be done, but that's wrong.
"If I go in with a positive attitude and have a positive patient, I have a
good fighting chance I can help that patient recover."
Few have a more positive attitude than Wentworth. "My No. 1 mission is to
get better," he says. "I love the Army. I would do anything to help
others. I would give my life to help soldiers."
-------------------------
posted by Larry
Scott
Founder and Editor
VA Watchdog dot Org
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