more research is needed to find out about skin rashes on the body.
have soliders come in and test them
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taydanry commented
I have been dealing with things like JP Maier. I get rashes on my hands and have respitory problems. Ive been needing inhalors since my service in the Gulf in 1990-1991. Ive gotten tests done at the VAMC and Ive been waiting for almost 2 years to hear on my claim. I took a pulmonary test with them and my brathing improved 26 percent after two puffs from an inhalor. If Im not mistaken, you wouldnt be allowed into the military if you needed to use an inhalor and if you needed it after serving in the Gulf amidst all those burning oil wells and who knows what else, one would figure the VA would just approve those claims and quit making vets wait for extended periods of time. I hope all that served in any area get what they deserve.
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AngryGulfWarVet3SWAServiceStars commented
The East Orange, NJ VA denies any skin rash claim, period. I've been fighting this VA for 7 years now on numerous claims that have either been low balled or denied. The doctors who gave my c & p exams have come and gone except the two idiots who should have their MD license revoked. One is a dermatologist and he's commenting on IBS/Irratible Colon claim and the other is a general physician who claims I told him my headaches go away with tylenol -- odd as I have never aken tylenol because in 1982 the tylenol scare -- he made up and flat out lied on my c & p exam/report. I had the traveling RO revue from the BVA in 2007 and have not heard back since -- 4 years later. The local VAMC I live 2 minutes from is worthless. The assigned physician denies I have IBS let alone Irritable colon -- even though my civilian doctors have sent proof -- don't even mention the therapist who claims we're all liars just trying to get a free lunch -- he had no clue who I was, my name, or anything about my medical background, yet he called me a liar and told me to get a job. Odd, he was upset when I asked him to tell me my name. It's all being denied to cover up the fact we are sick from our service. The government hopes enough of us die so they can come out and only have to pay a small amount of vets.
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Craig commented
I have a skin rash that appears on my left forearm ever since my return from Kuwait (1991), but the VA discounts (C&P examiner) as poison ivy (laughable as it happens in the winter as well) or other lame excuses......
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JP Maier commented
More research? How about ONE of the folks on this committee actually get out to VAMCs and talk to veterans. Not just some VIP tour where human lab samples are trotted out. I have been through four (4) VAMCs as both a patient and an employee in the last 15 years and can barely move 10 feet without running into a Gulf vet with skin-conditions, similar respiratory issues, and a host of other ailments that follow very distinct patterns. As a vet myself all I had to do was Google some questions and found several research data-sets publically available done by non-VA research centers. Even a sophmoric fact check can readily distinguish those reports that have undergone peer review and, not surprisingly, several substantive reports have passed said reviews. So why is it so difficult for an administrative committee to move forward on this? I guess the same question has been asked of your predecessors on the Agent Orange committee. Or was it even different people?
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janet commented
Antrax vaccine did cause rashes, too. I also worked GI clinic at Fitz in Aurora, we saw all kinds of rashes and symptoms, I was dx'd with epigenetic adult Cystic Fibrosis in 2008, but in 1997 I was dx'd with asthma via methacholine challenge test. TAKE PICTURES, get copies of all medical records , military and civilian, DOD has records you don't have. I know.
Have skin biopsied of those rashes, NO guesses. Watch your kidney function via eGFR testing, not just creatinine. AVOID contrasted MRI and CT scans, the radioactive iodine and the gadolinium metal are toxic. see fda.gov + gadolinium or Nurse's Drug Handbook about contrast dyes, NAC RX for CT scans, never given, what about those of us at Kamisaiyah? 10th MASH and other 43 support group units. We saw the ammo/nerve agents blown up, and we were down wind. I have the information. Get blood levels drawn for HEAVY metals , all of them, lots of depleted uranium, now chromium, better watch your health. you can submit civilian MD notes to the VA regional offices near you.
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Sandra Galaszewski (Stai) commented
FINALLY, I see others with rashes! I have had a rash since my first Anthrax vaccine and desert deployment; Bahrain in 1998. Several more months in the desert and several more vaccines later; the rash continued. It initially covered my entire body and now comes and goes in various different areas. The VA guesses it's dermatitis, however, the symptoms don't match...Thanks for sharing!! Good luck to all of you.
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janet commented
search MRI side effects and gadolinium used in MRI's, though chelated, it dechelates in the body and causes symptoms that mimic and are neurological as in balance, falls, skin rashes and muscle pains, contractures, deep bone pain and doctors deny this. it's diagnosed with a skin biopsy for inc dermal mucin and fibroblasts and CD+34, normal renal function ,dec renal function or end stage renal function. it's not rare, though the NSF doctors at Yale would have you believe this, they wrote the paper and diagnostic guidelines. It happened to me, I just got the skin sx July 2011, last MRI w contrast was Dec and Sept 2010, but also VA and Univ of Col hosp did MRI's with contrast. I was never informed and it's not in the nursing or PDR, but CT contrast is, they are supposed to Rx NAC 5mg tabs pre and post CT scans. Never get a contrasted MRI, see gadolinium. They will lie and laugh at you as they did to me re my difficulty walking, pain and fatigue, not psychiatric. I contacted my Congressman . This is cruel and inhumane. Search it.
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Joel K Drennan commented
We all have skin rashes and fatigue.memory loss etc...and they doctors can't do anything about it without testing us and finding out what is wrong. Don't make this another agent orange just test us and lets figure out what it is and help us. We are not mad we just want to be treated. if you have to pay us compensation for it so be it. The desert was and I am sure still is a nasty place. With the oil wells burning and so on back in 1991 who knows what we were exposed to but we have earned the right to be treated with respect and professional medical care. I meet a lady in 1996 that worked at Walter Reed and she told me some day the VA would come clean about the rashes and so forth just like agent orange. Please guys don't do it the the soldier again!
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Richard Velez commented
I myself notice skin problems after release from duty in the gulf.
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Anonymous commented
I did not know that other soldiers were having skin problems. Thought that there was just something wrong with me.