Clinical Trial: Compare the Medical Conditions of Gulf War Veterans to Non-Deployed Veterans

Study Status: Completed
Recruit Status: Completed
Study Type: Observational

Official Title: National Health Survey of Gulf War Era Veterans and Their Families - Phase III Physical Examinations

Brief Summary: Primary Hypothesis: Gulf War veterans will have an equal prevalence or mean level of the following medical and psychological conditions frequently reported in the literature compared to a control group of nondeployed veterans: (1) chronic fatigue syndrome, (2) fibromyalgia, (3) post-traumatic stress disorder, (4) neurologic abnormalities, including peripheral neuropathy and cognitive dysfunction, and (5) general health status.

Detailed Summary:

* 1,000 Gulf War veterans, spouses, & children and 1,000 non-deployed Gulf War era veterans, spouses, & children.

Primary Hypothesis: Gulf War veterans will have an equal prevalence or mean level of the following medical and psychological conditions frequently reported in the literature compared to a control group of nondeployed veterans: (1) chronic fatigue syndrome, (2) fibromyalgia, (3) post-traumatic stress disorder, (4) neurologic abnormalities, including peripheral neuropathy and cognitive dysfunction, and (5) general health status.

Secondary Hypotheses: (1) Medical conditions that were reported as more frequent among Gulf War veterans compared to nondeployed veterans in the self-reported data in Phase I will be of equal prevalence in the two groups upon objective clinical examination. These include arthritis, dermatitis, hypertension, bronchitis, and asthma. (2) The prevalence of the above medical conditions in the primary hypotheses and secondary hypothesis (#1) will be equal between the spouses of Gulf War veterans and those of nondeployed veterans. (3) The prevalence of major birth defects found on a pediatric physical examination of veterans' biologic children conceived after the war to Gulf War veterans and nondeployed veterans will be equal; the prevalence of medical conditions in children living in the veterans' household, whether conceived before or after the war, for Gulf War veterans and nondeployed veteran will be equal.

Intervention: This is an observational study.

Primary outcomes variables: chronic fatigue syndrome; post-traumatic stress disorder, fibromyalgia; peripheral neuropathy; cognitive dysfunction; and general health status: physical component and mental component.