Roanoke Times Copyright (c) 1995, Landmark Communications, Inc. DATE: MONDAY, November 14, 1994 TAG: 9411170073 SECTION: NATIONAL/INTERNATIONAL PAGE: A-1 EDITION: METRO SOURCE: RICHARD A. SERRANO LOS ANGELES TIMES DATELINE: FAYETTEVILLE, N.C. LENGTH: Long
Ten babies have died here already.
The children of Persian Gulf War veterans, they died of heart defects and liver cancer. One was born with no spleen. Three were born dead.
Their short, tragic lives - chronicled neatly by their mothers in family photo albums - are raising new fears that the mysterious Gulf War Disease syndrome, an unexplainable, untreatable affliction that reportedly has touched thousands of those who fought in the desert, is being passed on to the next generation.
Here at Fort Bragg, home to the Army's 82nd Airborne, veterans' wives learned almost by accident that they were not alone in mysteriously losing children. Some struck up casual conversations by chance with other grieving mothers at the beauty shop; others traded stories at the grocery.
The Fort Bragg experience is being repeated all over the United States. With some groups believing that as many as 65 percent of the children born to Gulf War soldiers are afflicted in some form or another, veterans and their spouses are confused and angry - and are increasingly refusing to have more children.
Dr. Ellen Silbergeld, a molecular toxicologist at the University of Maryland, told a congressional hearing in August that scientists now know that men exposed to toxic chemicals can pass the poison directly to their children through semen. What is frightening, she said, is that the chemicals can cause genetic mutations to the sperm.
Exactly why this occurs, she added, is the ``question we know the least about.''
Dr. Francis J. Waickman, an Akron, Ohio, environmental pediatrician, compared birth-defect statistics between Gulf War babies and other children. He found a 30 percent rate of abnormalities among the children of Gulf War veterans - ``probably tenfold of what is in the normal population,'' he said.
But as experts delve further into the issue, he said, more questions pop up. ``Can it be passed on? The answer is yes, insofar as we have hard evidence that chemicals can absolutely decrease numbers of sperm.
``It can create an infant whose immune system does not function normally, and as a consequence this can be a cause for the increased incidence of infections in these children.
``But does this alter genes? And can this occur when you have severe chemical exposure?''
He answered his questions this way: ``To my knowledge, this is the first time we've ever had such a large group exposed to a possible large degree of chemicals, so we better learn from this whole series of events.''
Betty Mekdeci, founder and director of the Association of Birth Defect Children in Orlando, Fla., is also studying the illnesses and deaths. Her group is circulating 10,000 questionnaires to Gulf War families, all information that will be dissected to look for trends and patterns.
Defense Department officials say that, while they sympathize deeply, they have yet to pinpoint a cause. They maintain that unless more research shows otherwise, U.S. soldiers were not exposed to life-threatening chemicals or other toxic agents from either the U.S. military or the regime of Iraq's Saddam Hussein.
Air Force Lt. Col. Doug Hart, a Pentagon spokesman on health and personnel matters, says some studies suggest that infant deaths and birth abnormalities are in line with expected percentages in the general population.
But don't tell that to the mothers of Waynesboro, Miss., site of a National Guard quartermaster corps. There, 13 of the 15 children born to returning Gulf War veterans suffer from serious birth defects.
Dennis West said his daughter, Reed, was born prematurely with collapsed lungs and a faulty immune system that leaves her almost defenseless against pneumonia and bronchitis.
Aimee Miller said her son, Joshua, came down with strange colds, pneumonia and high fevers. A mosquito bite caused his face to swell and his eyes to close shut. Some nights he wakes up raging and runs through the house.
Infant-mortality rates have suddenly increased among Gulf War veterans in four counties in Kentucky and Tennessee, home base of the Army's 101st Airborne Division; in three counties in Georgia that support the Army's 197th Infantry Division; and at Fort Hood in Texas.
Here in Fayetteville, Melanie Ayers lost her 5-month-old son, Michael. Except for some unusual sweating bouts, he had seemed a healthy child. Then, during a restless sleep one night last summer, he stopped breathing. And while Ayers frantically drove him to the hospital, he died.
``It's very frustrating the way people are just patronizing to us,'' she said. ``They pretend they understand our anguish. But we're getting more upset with government officials coming out and saying how confusing this all is but doing nothing to solve it.''
Hart, the Air Force spokesman, said the Pentagon is continuing to gather and examine statistics on health matters from Gulf War veterans and is comparing them with soldiers who did not go to the gulf, as well as accumulating other data on the long list of ailments that have touched the soldiers and their families.
He noted that a study by the Mississippi State Department of Health, which analyzed the incidents of birth defects in Waynesboro, came up with initial findings that indicated a normal rate of birth defects for the group there.
Yet, the phenomenon persists.
About a year after the war ended in early 1991, veterans began complaining of strange diseases. Rashes, nausea, headaches and even more severe ailments such as blood clots and cancers. Pentagon, veterans affairs and private medical experts remain at a loss to explain the problems, let alone determine if they are in any way related to service in the Gulf War.
Congress passed a Gulf veterans aid bill, signed this month by President Clinton, that authorizes payments to veterans who are chronically ill with undiagnosed disabilities that surfaced during or after the war. However, the bill did not extend assistance to the veterans' families, something many angry parents hope to push through Congress next year.
Experts in the private sector theorize that U.S. troops may have been harmed by any of a wide range of chemical or biological agents, uranium, sand fly fever or oil fires, as well as anti-nerve gas medications.
When they returned home and began reporting their symptoms, some of their wives also began coming down with similar rashes, fatigue and other ailments. Strangest of all, many wives complained - and still complain - of burning urinary tract and vaginal infections after having sex with their husbands. They also said their husbands produce ``burning semen'' that burns the skin when it is touched.
by CNB