Archive for the ‘Mental health’ Category

A Shock Wave of Brain Injuries

April 8, 2007

By Ronald Glasser

Sunday, April 8, 2007; Page B01

“We can save you. But you might not be what you were.”

Neurosurgeon, Combat Support Hospital, Balad, Iraq

This is the new physics of war. Three 155mm shells, linked together and combined with 100 pounds of Semtex plastic explosive, covered by canisters of butane or barrels of gasoline, can upend a 70-ton tank, destroy a Humvee or blow an engine block through the hood of a truck. Those deadly ingredients form the signature weapon of the war in Iraq: improvised explosive devices, known by anybody who watches the news as IEDs.

Some of the impact of these roadside bombs is brutally clear: Troops are maimed by projectiles, poisoned by clouds of bacteria-laced debris and burned by post-blast flames. But the IEDs have added a new dimension to battlefield injuries: wounds and even deaths among troops who have no external signs of trauma but whose brains have been severely damaged. Iraq has brought back one of the worst afflictions of World War I trench warfare: shell shock. The brain of a soldier exposed to a roadside bomb is shocked, truly.

About 1,800 U.S. troops, according to the Department of Veterans Affairs, are now suffering from traumatic brain injuries (TBIs) caused by penetrating wounds. But neurologists worry that hundreds of thousands more — at least 30 percent of the troops who’ve engaged in active combat for four months or longer in Iraq and Afghanistan — are at risk of potentially disabling neurological disorders from the blast waves of IEDs and mortars, all without suffering a scratch.

For the first time, the U.S. military is treating more head injuries than chest or abdominal wounds, and it is ill-equipped to do so. According to a July 2005 estimate from Walter Reed Army Medical Center, two-thirds of all soldiers wounded in Iraq who don’t immediately return to duty have traumatic brain injuries.

Here’s why IEDS carry such hidden danger. The detonation of any powerful explosive generates a blast wave of high pressure that spreads out at 1,600 feet per second from the point of explosion and travels hundreds of yards. The lethal blast wave is a two-part assault that rattles the brain against the skull. The initial shock wave of very high pressure is followed closely by the “secondary wind”: a huge volume of displaced air flooding back into the area, again under high pressure. No helmet or armor can defend against such a massive wave front.

It is these sudden and extreme differences in pressures — routinely 1,000 times greater than atmospheric pressure — that lead to significant neurological injury. Blast waves cause severe concussions, resulting in loss of consciousness and obvious neurological deficits such as blindness, deafness and mental retardation. Blast waves causing TBIs can leave a 19-year-old private who could easily run a six-minute mile unable to stand or even to think.

Another problem is that these blast-related brain injuries differ from other severe head traumas, and the complexity of treating returning troops with “closed-head” injuries is taxing an already overburdened military health-care system. There is not a neurosurgeon who works in a trauma unit anywhere in the United States who doesn’t know what to do when an ambulance brings in a biker who has suffered a severe head injury in a highway accident. The standard care involves using calcium channel blockers to protect damaged nerve cells against further injury, intravenous diuretics to control brain swelling and, if the swelling becomes too great, removal of the top of the skull to allow the brain to swell without increasing neurological damage. This is what surgeons did in the case of ABC News anchor Bob Woodruff, who suffered severe brain injuries from an IED blast in Baghdad last year.

All this works with the common types of severe head injuries, but it does not work with brains damaged by shock waves. Despite the usual interventions and treatments, the majority of blast-injury patients who have neurological damage do not fully recover. There is a growing understanding within the neurosurgical community that blast injuries are different from those caused by penetrating or skull-fracture trauma. It is thought that shock waves damage the brain at a microscopic, sub-cellular level. That’s why surgeons who are quite capable of reconstructing the skull of a motorcycle crash victim — something for which they have been well trained — struggle to come up with treatment and rehabilitation techniques for the explosion-damaged brains of troops.

“TBIs from Iraq are different,” said P. Steven Macedo, a neurologist and former doctor at the Veterans Administration. Concussions from motorcycle accidents injure the brain by stretching or tearing it, he noted. But in Iraq, something else is going on. “When the sound wave moves through the brain, it seems to cause little gas bubbles to form,” he said. “When they pop, it leaves a cavity. So you are littering people’s brains with these little holes.”

Almost as daunting as treating TBI is the volume of such injuries coming out of Iraq. Macedo cited the estimates, gleaned at seminars with VA doctors, that as many as one-third of all combat forces are at risk of TBI. Military physicians have learned that significant neurological injuries should be suspected in any troops exposed to a blast, even if they were far from the explosion. Indeed, soldiers walking away from IED blasts have discovered that they often suffer from memory loss, short attention spans, muddled reasoning, headaches, confusion, anxiety, depression and irritability.

What’s baffling is the Pentagon’s failure to work with Congress to provide a steady stream of funding for research on TBIs. Meanwhile, the high-profile firings of top commanders at Walter Reed have shed light on the woefully inadequate treatment for troops. In these circumstances, soldiers face a struggle to get the long-term rehabilitation necessary for a TBI. At Walter Reed, Macedo said, doctors have chosen to medicate most TBI patients, even though cognitive rehabilitation, including brain teasers and memory exercises, seems to hold the most promise for dealing with the disorder.

Oddly enough, having more military patients than can be adequately treated is, in terms of warfare, a gruesome kind of success. These are the war injured who once would have been the war dead. And it is the unexpected number of casualties who in a previous medical era would have been fatalities that has sunk the outpatient clinics at Walter Reed and left those in the VA system lost and adrift.

In Iraq and Afghanistan, the ratio of wounded service members to fatalities is 16 to 1, if the definition of “wounded” is anyone evacuated from a combat zone. During the Vietnam War, according to the VA, the ratio was 2.6 to 1. U.S. troops no longer die from the kind of injuries that killed many thousands in Vietnam. The majority of combat deaths there occurred right where the soldier was hit. If you were going to die, you were dead before there was any need of a medevac chopper. If you’d had an arm or leg blown off, the chances were that you had also suffered a penetrating chest or abdominal wound and would bleed to death waiting to be taken to the nearest surgical hospital.

But if the bleeding could be staunched and you were still breathing when the medics got to you, the odds on survival were in your favor. The military medicine practiced in Vietnam wasn’t so different from what World War II medics practiced: Stop the bleeding and hope for the best until the helicopter shows up.

It wasn’t until October 1993, when a U.S. combat assault team rappelled down from a helicopter into a 72-hour gunfight in the streets of Mogadishu, Somalia, that the notion of military medicine changed from basic life support to intensive care. In that siege situation, medics had no choice but to care for a growing number of wounded on their own, because evacuation was impossible. But without clear intensive-care procedures, they ran out of medications and fluids to treat the most severely injured.

In the civilian world, trauma medicine had progressed throughout the 1970s and ’80s, well past the simple expedients of tourniquet, plasma and keeping an airway open. Mogadishu forced the military to abandon the last of its medical practices from Vietnam. It was time to teach the medics a new trade.

Pentagon officials increased the training period for a 91W, or combat medic, from 10 to 16 weeks. Medics now trained on patient simulators that would “bleed to death” if blood loss was not stopped or “suffocate” if chest tubes weren’t correctly placed or a tracheotomy wasn’t performed within three minutes. Medics learned the new intensive-care theory of “hypotensive resuscitation,” in which intravenous fluids are given only in minimal amounts solely to keep the heart pumping, as opposed to the old Vietnam method of keeping blood pressure elevated, which only added to blood loss. Medics today use better-designed tourniquets and hemostatic bandages — dressings that act to stop bleeding for better hemorrhage control. They administer the latest non-opiate painkillers, which, unlike morphine and Demerol, do not slow breathing. This is the first war in which troops are very unlikely to die if they’re still alive when a medic arrives.

Another large part of the 16-to-1 wounded-to-fatality ratio has to do with advances in body armor. Today’s body armor is dramatically effective in preventing fatal wounds of the chest and upper abdomen. There is not an orthopedic or general surgeon in Iraq or Afghanistan who hasn’t been astonished the first time a trooper with two missing limbs and a traumatic brain injury is carried off in a chopper and the surgeon removing the armor cannot find a scratch from the chin to the groin.

But the unseen damage can be long-lasting. Most of the families of our wounded that I have interviewed months, if not years, after the injury say the same thing: “Someone should have told us that with these closed-head injuries, things would not really get all that much better.”

Now in its fifth year, the Iraq conflict is not a war of death for U.S. troops nearly so much as it is a war of disabilities. The symbol of this battle is not the cemetery but the orthopedic ward and the neurosurgical unit. The men and women inside those units have come home alive but missing arms and legs, many unable to see or hear or remember who they were before being hit by a roadside bomb. Survival clearly represents as much of a revolution in military medicine as does the dominance of the suicide bomber and the roadside bomb in the age of “shock and awe.” But now both the medical profession and the country are left to play a terrible game of catch-up.r

Ronald Glasser is a pediatric nephrologist and the author of ” Wounded: Vietnam to Iraq,” published last year. From 1968 to 1970, he was deployed at the U.S. Army Hospital at Camp Zama, Japan, treating U.S. soldiers wounded in Vietnam.

Related:
http://johnib.wordpress.com/2007/02/28/war-changing-lives-in-an-instant-bob-woodruff-and-mike-who-has-ptsd/

Search PTSD on this site to see our multi-chapter story.

Alzheimer’s: Five Million Americans

March 20, 2007

By Lauren Neergaard
AP Medical Writer

WASHINGTON – More than 5 million Americans are living with Alzheimer’s disease, a 10 percent increase since the last Alzheimer’s Association estimate five years ago — and a count that supports the long-forecast dementia epidemic as the population grays.

Age is the biggest risk factor, and the report to be released Tuesday shows the nation is on track for skyrocketing Alzheimer’s once the baby boomers start turning 65 in 2011. Already, one in eight people 65 and older have the mind-destroying illness, and nearly one in two people over 85.

Unless scientists discover a way to delay Alzheimer’s brain attack, some 7.7 million people are expected to have the disease by 2030, the report says. By 2050, that toll could reach 16 million.

Why? Ironically, in fighting heart disease, cancer and other diseases, “we’re keeping people alive so they can live long enough to get Alzheimer’s disease,” explains association vice president Steve McConnell.

Indeed, government figures released last year that show small drops in deaths from most of the nation’s leading killers between 2000 and 2004 — even as deaths attributed to Alzheimer’s disease increased 33 percent.

Yet the report also contains a startling finding: Between 200,000 and half a million people under age 65 have either early-onset Alzheimer’s or another form of dementia. Researchers have been hard-pressed to estimate of the number of young sufferers.

“I think this has been drastically underreported,” said Dr. Bill Thies, the Alzheimer’s Association’s medical director.

He cites as an example a 55-year-old having problems at work, such as behavior changes or missing deadlines, that may be early signs of brain impairment but that go unrecognized until they progress to full-scale memory problems.

The new report — based on federal population counts, not new disease research — is the first update of the Alzheimer’s toll since 2002, when it was estimated to afflict 4.5 million people. It comes as Congress is considering funding for research into Alzheimer’s and other diseases.

No one knows what causes Alzheimer’s creeping brain degeneration. It gradually robs sufferers of their memories and ability to care for themselves, eventually killing them. There is no known cure, and today’s drugs only temporarily alleviate symptoms.

Because it complicates treatment for every other illness, the new report shows Medicare spends nearly three times as much for dementia patients’ care as for the average beneficiary — $13,207 a year vs. $4,454.  Medicare’s spending on dementia-related care is projected to double to more than $189 million by 2015.

That doesn’t include the value of the unpaid round-the-clock care that families and friends provide the vast majority of Alzheimer’s patients who live at home — a tab the new report calculates at almost $83 billion_ or nursing home costs.

There are nine drugs in late-stage clinical trials, including a few that aim to slow Alzheimer’s worsening. If such drugs pan out, delaying Alzheimer’s symptoms by even a few years could cut by millions the coming decades’ predicted toll, the report notes.

Violence takes severe mental toll on Iraqis

March 20, 2007

By James Palmer
The Washington Times
March 20, 2007

BAGHDAD — Iraqi psychiatrists are seeing what they call a disturbing spike in mental health disorders as terrorism, an armed insurrection and a bloody sectarian divide grip the country. Escalating psychiatric caseloads are compounded by Iraq’s lack of mental health workers, facilities and services.
    
Several mental health care professionals say the number of untreated or undertreated people nationwide reaches into the millions, and the consequences could permanently damage generations.
    
“Iraqis are being traumatized every day,” said Said Al-Hashimi, a psychiatrist who runs a private clinic and teaches at Mustansiriya Medical School in Baghdad. “No one knows what will result from living through this continuous trauma on a daily basis.”
    
The government-run Ibn Rushd psychiatric center in the Iraqi capital provides startling examples of people looking for help.
    
In a sparsely furnished office at the hospital, Iraqis file in to describe their ailments to Haider Adel Ali, a somber psychiatrist.
    
Fanzia Jaafer, a 65-year-old housewife, has suffered from severe depression and suicidal thoughts since viewing the corpse of her son, whose head was nearly torn off by gunfire in late 2003.
    
Sundes Al-Dulaimi, 27, said she has suffered chronic headaches, insomnia, loss of appetite and panic attacks after her 55-year-old father was killed by a Shi’ite militia in June.
    
Zaman Al-Keelany, 15, has experienced flashbacks of a rocket destroying a building in her neighborhood. The high school freshman said she has managed to continue her studies but breaks down whenever she hears a loud noise.
    
Although there is no reliable research on the state of Iraqis’ mental health, the preliminary results of a survey of 10,000 primary school students in the Sha’ab section of northern Baghdad, conducted by the Iraqi Society of Psychiatrists and the World Health Organization, reveals startling and widespread problems.
    
The study, which has not been published, found that at least 70 percent of students were suffering from trauma-related symptoms, said Mohammed Al-Aboudi, Iraq’s national mental health adviser.
    
Dr. Al-Aboudi said the survey was repeated because of the unusually high numbers. The second results were similar.
    
Ten-year-old Ahmed Al-Dulaimi is one of the young Iraqis struggling to function.

Ahmed, who enjoys playing soccer and is computer savvy, stopped talking and refused to eat or drink when his family moved last year from their western Baghdad home to Fallujah for three months after receiving a threatening letter with a bullet enclosed.
    
They have since returned to Baghdad and say Ahmed’s condition is improving. But Ahmed is still receiving treatment at Ibn Rushd, and Dr. Ali, has prescribed antidepressants and advised his family to prevent Ahmed from watching violence on TV. 
    
“I look into the eyes of children whose parents have been killed or are imprisoned every day,” said Nadal Al-Shamri, a pediatrician at the Medical City health complex in Baghdad. “The psychological trauma is so deeply ingrained in some children that they may never lead a normal life.”
    
Dr. Al-Shamri said his 7-year-old son suffered an apparent nervous breakdown last year and stopped eating after a friend’s father was killed.
    
“It’s difficult for me to eat after watching him cry,” Dr. Al-Shamri said.
    
Iraq’s psychiatrists, like most medical professionals here, are suffering from shortages in training and funding. There are no psychotherapy or crisis centers, and Ibn Rushd is the only psychiatric hospital in the capital of 6 million people.
    
Patients at Ibn Rushd receive free treatment and medication, but those who can afford care at a private clinic pay about 5,000 Iraqi dinars, nearly $4,  for visits that usually last 30 minutes to an hour.
    
A shortage of prescription medicines has resulted in a Health Ministry order limiting treatments to 10 days.
    
There is a similar shortage of psychiatrists, who are among the professionals and intellectuals making a mass exodus from Iraq in response to a campaign of intimidation against them.
    
Dr. Al-Aboudi, who also heads the Iraqi Society of Psychiatrists, estimates that at least 140 of the country’s 200 psychiatrists either were killed or fled in the past four years.
    
Dr. Ali, who earns only $300 monthly, is among the psychiatrists determined to remain, and he has the scars to prove his courage: two bullet wounds in his right arm from an assassination attempt at his clinic last year.
    
Remarking on Iraq’s diminishing psychiatric resources, he said, “There is little interest from the government. We ask for training and assistance but get nothing.”
    
While seeing a string of patients one morning last month, Dr. Ali offered advice, prescriptions and, perhaps most important, compassion.
    
Mrs. Jaafer, the housewife with suicidal thoughts, was cloaked in a traditional black abaya and clutching a white tissue in her right hand as she sat on a chair adjacent to Dr. Ali’s desk and described the difficulties of coping with the death of her 29-year-old son, Haider, more than three years ago.
    
“Whenever I remember seeing his body at the morgue, I start to cry,” she said. 
    


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