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SHELL SHOCK REVISITED: SOLVING THE PUZZLE OF BLAST
TRAUMA -- Even at a distance, explosions may
cause lasting
damage to the brain. Such findings could have big
implications
for arming and compensating troops.

For more about shell shock, use the VA Watchdog
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http://www.yourvabenefits.org/sessearch.php?q=shell+shock&op=ph
Story here...
http://psychoanalystsoppos
ewar.org/blog/2008/01/25/blast-trauma-may-act-at-a-distance/
Story below:
-------------------------
Blast trauma may act at a distance
The new Science contains an important article on current thinking on
traumatic brain injury (TBI) from bomb blasts:
Shell Shock Revisited: Solving the Puzzle of Blast Trauma
Even at a distance, explosions may cause lasting damage to the brain. Such
findings could have big implications for arming and compensating troops
by Yudhijit Bhattacharjee
Working at the Military Hospital in Belgrade during the brutal Balkan war
of the 1990s, neurologist Ibolja Cernak encountered a medical enigma. She
saw soldier after soldier with memory deficits, dizziness, speech
problems, and difficulties with decision-making–but no obvious injury.
Cernak recalls one 19-year-old who went to a grocery store and began to
weep after he couldn’t remember how to get back home. When his mother
brought him to the hospital a few days later, Cernak learned what later
emerged as a common element in all these cases: The soldier had survived
an explosion on the battlefield.
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The strange thing was that most of these patients
had not suffered a direct injury to the head. And yet, in computed
tomography and magnetic resonance imaging scans, Cernak saw signs of
internal damage. In some cases, the brain’s ventricles–channels that carry
cerebrospinal fluid– had become enlarged; and in some, there was evidence
of minor bleeding.
But when Cernak dug into the medical literature for an explanation, she
came up empty. According to the available research, shock waves from an
explosion injure mainly air-filled organs such as the lung and the bowel,
not the brain.
With a small band of collaborators in Belgrade, China, and Sweden, Cernak
undertook animal studies that eventually confirmed that blast waves can
cause neuronal damage. The work drew little attention until 2 years ago
when hundreds of U.S. and British soldiers began returning from Iraq with
symptoms similar to those of Cernak’s patients. As roadside explosions
became more common, military doctors suspected that these symptoms were
the likely result of mild traumatic brain injury (TBI) sustained in
blasts. Seeing her observations borne out was as if “a myth had become
reality,” says Cernak, who is now a researcher at the Applied Physics
Laboratory at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, Maryland.
How blasts affect the brain has since become an urgent question in
military medicine. Last summer, the U.S. Congress gave $150 million to the
Department of Defense (DOD) for the first year of research on TBI– both
severe injuries that damage the skull and milder ones suspected of causing
neurological deficits. The Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency
(DARPA) has already launched a $9 million research program aimed
specifically at understanding trauma caused by shock waves, heat, and
electromagnetic radiation emanating from blasts. Another $14 million a
year is going to the Defense and Veterans Brain Injury Center (DVBIC), a
DOD-funded agency headquartered in Washington, D.C., for research and
outreach on TBI.
This flurry of interest has focused a spotlight on Cernak’s research.
There is growing consensus that blasts can produce subtle injuries in the
brain as suggested by Cernak several years ago. In fact, the Department of
Veterans Affairs (VA) proposed a new rule this month acknowledging
blast-related TBI as a special neurological condition whose symptoms may
have gone undetected in the past. The proposed rule, published in the
Federal Register on 3 January, would allow for greater disability
compensation to victims than is granted currently.
But many researchers are skeptical of Cernak’s ideas about how these
injuries might occur. Cernak postulates that blast waves ripple through
the victim’s torso up into the brain through the major blood vessels,
leading to neurological effects that can be slow to appear. Although she
has evidence from animal experiments to back up that hypothesis, she
admits that more research is needed. If the mechanism is confirmed by
future studies, Cernak says, it would mean that helmets do not protect the
brain against blast injury.
Besides raising questions about the protection of troops currently in
combat, Cernak’s suggestion that simply being exposed to an explosion
might lead to long-lasting brain damage has opened a Pandora’s box,
particularly for veterans. It implies that some could be suffering from
neurological deficits that went undiagnosed or were mistakenly attributed
to posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD). Indeed, since the government
began putting out information about blast-related TBI, veterans have been
trickling in to seek treatment for mental problems that some have lived
with for decades. “It may well be that blast injuries follow the pattern
of Agent Orange and Gulf War syndrome,” says former VA psychiatrist David
Trudeau, referring to ill-defined health problems that have lingered for
years after battle.
Hidden trauma
If Cernak had been a doctor during World War I, she says, she might well
have recognized mild TBI among the thousands of soldiers who suffered from
what was simply called “shell shock.” But during World War I, many doctors
and military commanders viewed shell shock as a transient psychological
phenomenon that affected soldiers who, in their opinion, were mentally
weak.
Cernak discovered something very different: that soldiers’ mental problems
seemed to be driven by enduring physical changes in the brain. To test her
hypothesis, she conducted a study of 1300 patients who had suffered
penetrating wounds to the lower body but not the head. More than half had
suffered injuries in a blast; the rest had been wounded by projectiles.
Many of the blast victims complained of symptoms such as insomnia,
vertigo, and memory deficits, and more than 36% in this group showed
irregular patterns of electrical activity in the brain–as measured by
electroencephalograms taken within 3 days of the injury– compared to only
12% in the other group. A year later, 30% of blast- injured patients still
showed abnormal brain activity compared to 4% of the rest. Cernak says the
findings, published in the Journal of Trauma in 1999, suggested that the
mental problems of blast victims had a biological basis.
Her study wasn’t the first to make that point. A year earlier, VA
researchers had found that among veterans with PTSD, individuals with a
history of blast exposure were much more likely than others to have
abnormal brain activity as well as cognitive and behavioral problems.
“Our evidence pointed to the possibility that blast injury was a long-
lasting injury in combat veterans,” says Trudeau, who retired in 2000. He
says he was disappointed by the lack of follow-up to the study, published
in the August 1998 Journal of Neuropsychiatry. “The reception we got was
pretty lukewarm,” he says.
For decades, Army researchers had been studying the effects of blast waves
but with a different focus. They concentrated on how to protect the lungs
and bowel because the pressure from an explosion is most likely to shear
at the interface of these tissues, where densities differ. DOD was so
confident that advanced body armor was protecting troops against lung and
bowel injuries that it closed down this research program in 2003. “We
thought, why spend more money on this when we’ve fixed the problem?” says
Geoffrey Ling, a neurologist and a program manager at DARPA.
Then the bad news arrived. As blast survivors from Iraq were air-lifted to
hospitals, U.S. Army doctors, including Ling, who was deployed in Iraq in
late 2004, began to see patients whose brains had swelled markedly within
hours of being close to a blast. Some had clear head injuries but many did
not. Even in cases involving visible wounds, the extent of swelling was
often much greater than expected, leading neurosurgeons to wonder whether
blast waves had played a role in addition to penetrating shrapnel. Ling
says the patterns of vascular enlargement seen across a range of patients
showed a continuum of brain injury, suggesting that there could be milder
versions that were less obvious.
That suspicion has grown stronger with hundreds of soldiers returning from
the war zone complaining of a common cluster of cognitive and behavioral
problems. Army doctors say they have encountered many patients who are
unable to perform simple addition and subtraction, read more than one
sentence at a stretch, or recall simple things like what they had for
lunch. “The majority are individuals who lost consciousness or were dazed
after a blast but did not sustain overt head injuries,” says Ronald
Riechers, a neurologist at Walter Reed Army Medical Center in Washington,
D.C. “Within a short time frame, they develop headaches and notice that
their reaction time and concentration are not the same as before.” Based
on these evaluations, DVBIC estimates that 10% to 20% of all soldiers on
duty in Iraq and Afghanistan have suffered some type of TBI.
Ling says the TBI numbers prompted DOD to restart its research on blast
injury, this time with a focus on the brain. DARPA is funding two main
projects as part of the first basic science effort on the topic. One will
study the mechanical and cellular effects of blast waves in an animal
model. Another will look at the consequences of repeated exposures to
low-intensity explosions among military breachers, whose job is to blast
holes into buildings using shoulder-launched weapons. “Once you know for
certain what in a blast is really hurting the brain and how, you can use
that to develop therapies and prevention strategies,” says Ling.
A tsunami in the brain
Although it is becoming accepted that blast waves can cause TBI, Cernak’s
theory about how the damage occurs is controversial, and it has
implications for how best to protect troops. She hypothesizes that when
blast waves strike the body, they transfer kinetic energy and cause
pressure in the main blood vessels to oscillate rapidly. A pulse travels
up through the neck into the brain, damaging axonal fibers and neurons in
the hippocampus, brainstem, and other structures close to cerebral
vessels. The shock can also injure cells farther out in the cortical
regions.
That mechanism is entirely different from the more widely studied effects
of acceleration or deceleration in a car crash. Researchers know that a
crash impact can shake the brain so violently that axonal fibers are torn.
Some say victims of explosions could be experiencing a similar whiplashing,
in contrast to Cernak’s view–which would mean that helmets designed to
dampen that effect could help. “I am very skeptical that kinetic energy
could be transferred through the vascular system,” says J. Clay Goodman, a
neuropathologist at Baylor College of Medicine in Houston, Texas. “It is
much more reasonable to consider the blast effects directly on the cranial
vault and the brain.”
Cernak says her findings show the vascular route to be more plausible. In
experiments that exposed rats and rabbits to a simulated blast wave in a
shock tube–a cylinder through which an air pulse is transmitted at high
velocity–Cernak and her colleagues found that immobilizing the animal’s
head with steel plates to prevent whiplash effects did not protect against
hippocampal cell damage, as they reported in the Journal of Trauma in
2001. Cernak says the vascular-transmission theory could explain the
unique combination of symptoms in blast-induced TBI, as well as why
neurological symptoms are seen in soldiers wearing helmets. For example,
memory deficits hint at damage to the hippocampus, whereas problems in
orientation reflect injuries to the cerebellum. “What’s happening in blast
injury is that these inner structures are being affected,” Cernak says, in
contrast to TBIs in traffic accidents and contact sports, where the cortex
bears most of the brunt.
Cernak presented unpublished results last month at the Blast Injury
Conference in Tampa, Florida, showing that exposure to blast waves can
trigger neurodegeneration in rat brains, fragmenting the walls of neurons
in the hippocampus and other regions. Similar findings have been published
by Annette Saljo, a researcher at the University of Goteborg in Sweden and
a collaborator of Cernak’s. Saljo and her colleagues reported in the
Journal of Neurotrauma in August 2000 that rats exposed to blasts showed a
buildup of neurofilament proteins in the cortex and the hippocampus during
the week following the injury. This suggests that the damage can worsen
over time, like a “slow cooking under the surface,” says Cernak: “One
could think of it as a horribly accelerated aging of the brain.”
If blast waves indeed cause injury by vascular transmission, new types of
body armor may be needed. “We would need to develop materials that
completely absorb or reflect the full range of blast-wave frequencies
generated by an explosion,” says Cernak, adding that current body armor
only shields against some of a blast’s kinetic energy.
Cernak has done pioneering work, says John Povlishock, a neuroanatomist at
Virginia Commonwealth University in Richmond, adding that she may be right
that a “rapid rise and fall in venous pressure” is what stamps the blast’s
signature on the brain. But more studies are needed to validate her ideas
and translate the animal results into humans: “This is a topic with great
economic, military, and social implications,” he says, “and as of now, the
literature is extremely limited.”
Needed: A gold standard
As blast casualties from Iraq have mounted, the U.S. military has stepped
up efforts to detect TBI among troops. In July 2006, the Army Surgeon
General asked all unit commanders in Iraq to request TBI screening for
soldiers displaying “poor marksmanship, delayed reaction times, decreased
ability to concentrate, and inappropriate behavior.”
Troops who have been in a blast are evaluated by field medics using a
short questionnaire that asks, among other things, if the person lost
consciousness and had trouble remembering things from just before the
explosion. Depending on the severity of the symptoms, they are asked to
take a day off or see a neuropsychologist.
Some veterans groups believe a more aggressive screening policy is needed,
especially because the symptoms of blast injury might not show up until
later and because subtle injuries might not show up in standard brain
scans. The ideal option, some say, would be to use a biomarker:
“We’d like to be able to do a blood test to determine the injury,” says
Colonel Robert Labutta, a neurologist at the health affairs office at DOD.
But until the science of blast injury is established, officials say, it
does not make sense to bring home every soldier who has been in the
vicinity of an explosion.
The costs of treating TBI victims from Iraq and Afghanistan could be
astronomical. At last count, nearly 25,000 soldiers had been diagnosed
with TBI. One estimate of the financial burden, calculated by Harvard
researchers, puts the number at $14 billion over the next 20 years. But
officials seem determined not to miss any cases among troops coming
home: In April, VA mandated TBI screening for all Iraq and Afghanistan
veterans who come to VA hospitals for any services, even if it’s a dental
exam.
The spotlight on mild TBI has drawn the attention of older combat veterans
who were exposed to blasts but were never treated for neurological
symptoms. Many were diagnosed with PTSD; some of the symptoms–such as
depression, irritability, and attention deficit– overlap with those of
mild TBI. These cases, some reaching back to the Vietnam War, could have
significant legal and financial implications, says Edward Kim, a
psychiatrist with Bristol-Myers Squibb in Plainsboro, New Jersey, and
author of a recent report from the American Neuropsychiatric Association
on the mental health effects of TBI. “I question whether DOD and the VA
really want to open this can of worms,”
he says. For example, a veteran with Alzheimer’s disease could make a
claim pointing to research showing that TBI increases the risk of
developing Alzheimer’s disease.
Cernak says she has been receiving e-mails and phone calls from veterans
thanking her for her research and seeking more information. Last month,
she got a call from a 47-year-old woman who had served in the first Gulf
War. The woman had been a teacher before she went to the combat zone,
where she was exposed to repeated blasts. After she returned home, she had
to stop teaching because she could not remember any facts. The story
reminded Cernak why she had begun studying this obscure field 2 decades
ago. “Soldiers anywhere are one of the most vulnerable populations in the
world,” she says. “It is a moral obligation to help them.”
-------------------------
posted by Larry
Scott
Founder and Editor
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