Archive for the ‘Woodruff’ 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.

Some Military Perspective On The Walter Reed Hospital Situation

March 21, 2007

Get it fixed!  STAT!

By John E. Carey
Commander, U.S. Navy (Retired)
March 20, 2007

Many officers in the U.S. Army believe themselves the victim of yellow journalism here in the Walter Reed Army Medical Center situation.

Army officers take great pride in how they treat their most important asset: their soldiers. So any implication that the U.S. Army neglects its soldiers, the men and women now fighting and dying in war, cuts to the quick.

And it goes even deeper when the Army seems to be neglecting the wounded. Those wearing the Purple Heart are in a unique group that have achieved a kind of sainted status in all U.S. military services.

Whenever I see a Purple Heart on a uniform I stop the wearer to salute him and ask about his story. Many are embarassed by this…..but I tell them they are among the sainted few.

Most of my Naval Officer and retired Navy friends feel the same way as their Army fellows do about the Washington Post and the Walter Reed situation.

My heart goes out to those fired and all the military men and women, active and retired, that feel they were wronged. But my heart also goes out to the soldiers that experienced neglect, sadness, confusion, depression and unusual circumstances at Walter Reed.

Many military men hate the Washington Post and consider it a communist newspaper bent on destroying all the good things American. AND they think this was an anti-war hit job.

I think it a very complex and complicated situation.

Walter Reed was on the Base Realignment and Closure (BRAC) list: slated for closing in a few years. Thus the commander was seeing less and less in the way of money. This was the result of decisions made by the U.S. Congress that bears more than a little responsibility here.

The medical services at Walter Reed are terrific. Really first rate. I’ve been in and out of the hospital visiting the wounded. I have also spent time at the Bethesda Naval Hospital facility and at the Veterans Administration hospital in Washington D.C. All are top notch.

I think the commander at Walter Reed began to cut corners in after care and housing: and his staff is almost criminally negligent for allowing the true condition of his facility to go unreported back to him via the chain of command.

As a former Naval Officer and warship Commanding Officer I believe in “Management by Walking Around.” The boss sees things he’ll not always like when he walks around. He discovers where the holes in his organization are and where he himself has shortcomings.

At Walter Reed the boss stayed put in his office too much, I think, probably, and didn’t know the true conditions on his ship. Those that got fired deserved it in my opinion: both because they allowed after care and housing to slip and because they didn’t know the true condition of the physical plant they were responsible for.

Because he viewed himself as a Hospital Director he apparently didn’t get around his facility and didn’t know what was going on beyond the walls of the hospital. He was in fact a Base and Troop Commander as well as a Hospital Director. He didn’t get it, I believe, because he is a DOCTOR first and a soldier second. Being a Doc got in the way of his being a soldier and Commander!

I think the Washington Post should get a medal. Especially Dana Priest. This is a great case of investigative journalism: something that the victim never likes. Dana and her teammates uncovered some serious abnormalities. The U.S. Army got embarrassed but the problems are now being addressed.

Note: I wrote about how good the Navy hospitals are (see links at the bottom). I didn’t do this to embarrass the Army but to point out that patient care is great at all of our military and VA hospitals but there is not perfection across the board.

I hope this gives people without much military experience some additional understanding.

Other essays related to this topic:
http://www.nowpublic.com/u_s_naval_medical_center_proud_traditions_of_navy_
marine_corp_team_continue_at_bethesda_hospital

http://www.nowpublic.com/tribute_to_wars_medical_professionals_on_the_front_lines

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

Walter Reed U.S. Army Hospital Commanding General Relieved of Command

March 1, 2007

By William Branigin
Washington Post Staff Writer
Thursday, March 1, 2007; 4:20 PM

The Army today relieved the commander of Walter Reed Army Medical Center, saying it had “lost trust and confidence” in his leadership in the wake of a scandal over outpatient treatment of wounded veterans at the Washington, D.C., hospital complex.

Army Maj. Gen. George W. Weightman, commanding general of the North Atlantic Regional Medical Command and of the Walter Reed center, was relieved of command by the secretary of the Army, Francis J. Harvey, at 10 a.m. today, the Army announced in a news release. It said the action was under consideration for the past several days and that a decision was made yesterday.

“Maj. Gen. Weightman was informed this morning that the senior Army leadership had lost trust and confidence in the commander’s leadership abilities to address needed solutions for soldier-outpatient care at Walter Reed Army Medical Center,” the statement said. It said Lt. Gen. Kevin C. Kiley, who serves as surgeon general of the Army and commander of the U.S. Army Medical Command, will take over temporarily as commander of Walter Reed “until a general officer is selected for this important leadership position.”

The action came 10 days after a Washington Post series exposed deplorable living conditions for some wounded outpatient soldiers at Walter Reed and bureaucratic problems that prevented many from getting the care they need. Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates later described the situation as “unacceptable,” appointed an independent review panel to look into it and vowed rapid corrective action.

Gates today endorsed the leadership change. He said in a statement: “The care and welfare of our wounded men and women in uniform demand the highest standard of excellence and commitment that we can muster as a government. When this standard is not met, I will insist on swift and direct corrective action and, where appropriate, accountability up the chain of command.”

The Post reported today that top officials at Walter Reed, including Kiley, had heard complaints about outpatient neglect from family members, veterans groups and members of Congress for more than three years without acting effectively to deal with the problems.

In its statement today, the Army said it is “moving quickly to address issues regarding outpatient care at Walter Reed Army Medical Center.”

It said Harvey last week directed the vice chief of staff of the Army, Gen. Richard A. Cody, to “develop and implement an Army Action Plan to address shortcomings at Walter Reed as well as Army-wide.”

The Army said the action plan and a separate inquiry by an independent review group announced Feb. 20 “will continue examining military-medical rehabilitative conditions and administrative care in the weeks to come.” The statement added, “The Army senior leadership will continue to take prompt corrective action as deficiencies are identified.”

It quoted Harvey as saying, “We’ll fix as we go; we’ll fix as we find things wrong.” He described soldiers as “the heart of our Army” and said “the quality of their medical care is non-negotiable.”

In The Post series last month, reporters Dana Priest and Anne Hull reported finding wounded soldiers living in squalid conditions in Building 18, a decrepit former hotel just outside the Walter Reed compound on Georgia Avenue. Some of the soldiers were housed there in quarters plagued by mold, rot, mice and cockroaches. The series also documented a broader issue of bureaucratic indifference that soldiers and family members found demoralizing and said had impeded recovery.

Kiley, the newly appointed commander of Walter Reed who lives just across the street from Building 18, told a news conference last week that the problems at the 54-room facility “weren’t serious and there weren’t a lot of them.” He charged that The Post series unfairly characterized the living conditions and care for recovering soldiers, calling it “a one-sided representation.”

Kiley also said the problems were neither widespread nor symptomatic of a system that has “abandoned soldiers and their families.” His comments came at the end of a media tour that featured repair efforts in Building 18. Kiley was commander at Walter Reed before becoming surgeon general in 2004.

His comments stood in sharp contrast to those of top Pentagon officials, who blamed a breakdown in leadership for the problems at Walter Reed and pledged to make quick fixes.

Cody, the Army vice chief of staff, and William Winkenwerder Jr., assistant secretary of defense for health affairs, declined last week to specify precisely where the leadership breakdown occurred or to identify anyone who was at fault. Instead, they and Weightman said they accepted overall responsibility for the situation.

Last week, the Army relieved of their duties several low-ranking soldiers who managed outpatients at Walter Reed. The soldiers were not publicly identified, and details of their alleged transgressions were not released.

Disclosing the action, Gates hinted to reporters after a visit to Walter Reed that higher-ranking officers also could face disciplinary measures. “We will be looking and evaluating the rest of the chain of command as we get more information,” he said.

Weightman served as Walter Reed commander for less than seven months, having assumed the post in August 2006. A native of Vermont, he graduated from the U.S. Military Academy in 1973 and received his medical degree from the University of Vermont in 1982. Weightman later became the chief surgeon of the 82nd Airborne Division and served with the division during the 1989 invasion of Panama and the 1991 Persian Gulf War. During the 2003 invasion of Iraq, he was the command surgeon for the Coalition Forces Land Component.

Kiley, his replacement, graduated from the University of Scranton and obtained his medical degree from Georgetown University School of Medicine in Washington. He has served as division surgeon for the 10th Mountain Division, commander of the Landstuhl Regional Medical Center in Germany and command surgeon for the U.S. Army Europe and the 7th Army.
*********************
Peace and Freedom Editor’s Comment: “The care and welfare of our wounded men and women in uniform demand the highest standard of excellence and commitment that we can muster as a government. ” This says it all. Congratulations to the Washington Post, especially reporters  Dana Priest and Anne Hull  for exposing the abuses and neglect at Walter Reed! Well done! And thanks! Every American owes you. 

Another point has to be made here.  Our soldiers and even others like ABC journalist Bob Woodward, get the finest medical care on earth.  We’ve seen it with our own eyes….
John E. Carey

Tribute to Our Medical Men on The Front Lines of War 
By John E. Carey
Summer 2006
 

Every single Soldier, Sailor, Airman and Marine, every man and woman who serves this great nation, deserves our eternal thanks, admiration and respect.  The difference between our current engagements in Iraq and Afghanistan and the war in Vietnam is this: we, as a nation, have matured enough to recognize that we need to support our men and women in service: no matter our political position on the conflict. 

While no segment of our military population deserves more or less credit and thanks than any other, we might take a moment to recognize the valor, selfless giving and dedication exhibited by the corpsmen, also known as “medics” or “docs,” who serve in the front lines of conflict. 

Through our nation’s history, medical professionals have saved lives, assisted the wounded, performed countless amputations, and risked their own lives to save others.  Many non-professionals also assisted by providing battlefield care, assisting with surgery, even saying prayers and giving comfort.  The contributions of all these men of mercy are remarkable. 
 
Medics exemplify selflessness.  Many carry no firearms – burdened by life-saving equipment.  They are technically not in the fight and considered “non-combatants” – they are there to respond to the needs of the maimed and wounded.
 

Perhaps the most trying conditions experienced by wartime “docs” occurred during the Civil War. 

Confederate surgeon William Henry Taylor wrote, “The bullets whizzing past me were for awhile rather dismaying, but, finding that I still lived, I heartened up gradually, and the longer I lived the greater the assurance I felt that I was not to die, till presently I stood the fire with an equanimity that astonished me.” 

Like other surgeons of the war years, especially Confederates, Dr. Taylor applied his skills despite many shortages and needs. “Normally, we were scant of medicines, and, generally, they were of the commoner kinds,” wrote Dr. Taylor.  

Progress was made in medical technique and care throughout America’s wars, and though casualties were severe in World War I and II, the number of men saved grew as a direct result of the prompt, professional action of so many medics at the front: and a vast number of doctors and other medical professionals stretched from the war zone back to the home towns and V.A. hospitals in America. 

But even as we improve upon the lifesaving technologies and techniques of the medics, weapons designed to tear flesh apart are “improved.”  Human destruction advances even with the life saving sciences. 

I interviewed a Korean War U.S. Army medic who wanted to relay just two thoughts.  Upon arrival in the Asian war theater aboard a troop ship, he recalled feeling the rush of adrenalin that comes when men are about to engage in a great mission.  “But as we disembarked from the ship, I was horrified to face the reality of war.  Stacked on the pier were coffins containing our war dead – awaiting their last sea journey home aboard that same ship that delivered me into combat.” 

That same corpsman told me, “War is no place for any shirker.  But a medic feels he has to be as close to the action as possible: because that is where he is needed most.  Being just a few dozen meters back from the action meant I might not get to the wounded in time.” 

In Iraq, the long tradition of working literally “under fire” described during the Civil War by Doctor Taylor continues to this day.  “The Marines know that if they are wounded, a corpsman will ignore the firefight and just patch them up,” said Capt. D.A. Zembiec, a company commander. His Marines fought near Fallujah in Iraq. 

In San Diego, at the Marine Corp Recruit Depot, a building bears the name of corpsman Michael Vann Johnson Jr., a 25-year-old Navy corpsman, killed by an enemy grenade March 25, 2003 in Iraq. Yes, corpsmen do contribute the ultimate sacrifice. 

The scene at a military hospital processing wounded from the front lines can be horrific. “It’s life and death, every day,” said Lt. Col. Bob Mazur, a doctor at the 10th Combat Support Hospital in Iraq. 

“If you look at the overall death rate … the case fatality rate is cut in half from Vietnam to now. And again I think that’s due to better training, tactical combat casualty training,” said Col. John Holcomb, the senior surgeon at the hospital. 

The thing about war is that so many die.  The thing about medics is that so many can be saved. 

In Iraq and Afghanistan today, even as most American work, sleep and lead their ordinary lives, corpsmen are closing wounds, staunching the flow of blood and saving lives. They are facing high powered rifles, automatic weapons and one of the crueler demons of recent wars: the so called “Improvised Explosive Devices” or IEDs. Dozens of the medics I met deserve to have their names and stories clearly honored in this newspaper and others; but they would not hear of it.  “It’s my job, sir.  I do it for that: and because these other guys need me. Besides, a lot of guys do more than me.” 

That quote exemplifies the selflessness of our medics and others in the medical community, saving lives in war. 
 

Mr. Carey is the former president of International Defense Consultants, Inc. He was recently in Iraq.

As a postscript to this we invite people to listen to the interview od Bob Woodruff and his lovely bride from National Public Radio.

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

http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=7618702

War: Changing Lives in an Instant: Bob Woodruff and Mike Who Has PTSD

February 28, 2007

Journalist Bob Woodruff had reached the top of his profession when his life changed in an instant.Several weeks after he was named as co-anchor of ABC’s World News Tonight, Woodruff and his cameraman were gravely injured by a roadside bomb while reporting in Iraq.

Thirteen months after the attack, he and his wife, Lee Woodruff, have written In an Instant, a book about his experiences in Iraq and how the couple recovered together.

The narration switches between Woodruff and his wife, who flew to Germany after his injury. Woodruff spent 35 days in a coma.

“It was like being on the other side of the moon, to see my husband’s face,” says Lee Woodruff.

Despite the crushing injury and months of uncertainty and physical therapy, Woodruff’s outlook remains positive.

“He is basically a happy person,” Lee Woodruff says of her husband. “I’ve never heard a moment of bitterness come out of his mouth.”

The Woodruffs spoke with Renee Montaigne about what life is like after the injury, shifting their priorities and how the experience has changed them.

To hear the interview with the Woodruffs, link to National Public Radio:
http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=7618702

My friend Mike has been diagnosed with severe PTSD as a result of his service in the war on terror.  We will report on whatever Mike wants to discuss in a day or two but I’ll just give my own impressions.  Mike loves his country.  He volunteered to join the Army and he volunteered to serve in the war.  He had no idea what he would suffer through in combat.

 Our stories on PTSD are all here on this site.  Word search PTSD.

–John E. Carey


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