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Author: TriSec    Date: 12/04/2012 11:04:50

Good Morning.

Today is our 4,076th day in Afghanistan.

We'll start this morning as we always do; with the latest casualty figures from our ongoing war, courtesy of Antiwar.com:

US Military Deaths - Afghanistan: 2,161
Other Military Deaths - Afghanistan: 1,073

We find this morning's cost of war passing through:

$ 1, 399, 510, 250, 000 .00


It's been a very long week...and I haven't saved any real stories for this week. So, we'll take a look back at something from the first Gulf War that is still unresolved to this day...Gulf War Syndrome. I know a couple of folks that were over there 'the first time', but fortunately seem to have avoided any real symptoms. Nevertheless, the research has been ongoing for almost two decades now....and there's been some progress.


WASHINGTON — Gulf War illness, the series of symptoms ranging from headaches to memory loss to chronic fatigue that plagues one of four veterans of the 1991 Persian Gulf war, is due to damage to the autonomic nervous system, a study released Monday shows.

“This is the linchpin,” said the study’s lead author, Robert Haley, chief of epidemiology at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center in Dallas.

“The disease itself is so difficult to express and to understand,” Haley said, explaining that veterans described simply that they “don’t feel well” or “can’t function,” without being able to further explain a disease that affects the automatic functions of their bodies, such as heat regulation, sleep or even their heartbeats.

“Docs don’t know what the disease is, so they can’t help,” Haley said. “But if you can figure out what the disease is, the other problems will fall in line.”

Researchers spent 15 years researching a hypothesis, and then “we planned the ultimate study that proved that hypothesis,” Haley said.

Along with Steven Vernino, chief of the neuromuscular division at Southwestern, Haley sent 97 veterans through 25 tests, including brain imaging, in seven days. The group had been drawn from a sample of 8,000 Gulf War veterans. The study was published Monday in Archives of Neurology.

“Veterans have high faith in Dr. Haley’s dedicated and informative research,” said Paul Sullivan of Veterans for Common Sense and a Gulf War veteran. “This finding is important because for the first time physicians who care for Gulf War veterans now have a medical explanation for many of the unusual symptoms.”

The team conducted several studies, and then built a theory based on the results of that work.

The doctors had funding from Congress until 2010, when they were dropped by the Department of Veterans Affairs after being accused of wasting millions of dollars in research money. That came directly after a 2009 study from Haley showed that neurotoxins such as anti-nerve agent pills, insect repellent and the nerve agent sarin caused neurological changes to the brain, and that the changes seem to correlate with different symptoms.

After they lost funding, Haley and the other researchers continued their work on their own time.

“This is the most important study of all,” Haley said. “The veterans want to know what’s wrong with them. Now, for the first time, all the doctors in the country can say, ‘Oh, maybe these are autonomic symptoms.’ If you’re not thinking autonomic, the symptoms can sound kind of flaky.”


And only one other story today. It's about the music. We all know that music makes you smarter, thanks to the celebrated (and debunked) "Mozart Effect".

But perhaps you didn't know that some therapies for our wounded soldiers rely heavily on music, and it does indeed seem to help.


Music is known to “soothe the savage beast” but it also can improve cognitive function and motor coordination in those with a brain injury or disease, say music therapy advocates.

Now patients at the National Intrepid Center of Excellence and Walter Reed National Military Medical Center in Bethesda, Md., will have a chance to see whether learning or playing an instrument can improve their brain power.

Officials with the Intrepid Center, or NICoE, announced Nov. 16 they will expand the facility’s therapeutic arts program to include music.

The therapy will be offered as part of Operation Homecoming, an initiative co-sponsored by the National Endowment for the Arts that explores the healing power of the arts, including writing, drawing and painting.

“Neurologic music therapy, which is science-based music training, helps people regain speech, movement and other neurological function lost to disease,” NEA Chairman Rocco Landesman said.

Music therapy will be available to the roughly 240 patients seen at the NICoE each year as well as Walter Reed outpatients who have a traumatic brain injury, post-traumatic stress disorder, Alzheimer’s, Parkinson’s or other neurologic conditions.

The program will be evaluated clinically to determine whether it should be expanded to other military treatment facilities and brain injury centers nationwide, according to Rear Adm. Alton Stocks, Walter Reed’s commander.

“Our role at the NICoE isn’t to treat thousands of patients who have TBI or PTS right now but to do the research and education on what works. We expect it will have much more far-reaching effects,” Stocks said.

Operation Homecoming was first established in 2004 by the NEA to help troops and families write about their experiences in Afghanistan, Iraq and at home. Of the program’s roughly $200,000-a-year budget, about $70,000 will go to music instruction and therapy research through 2015, officials said.


Interesting stuff, to say the least.
 

57 comments (Latest Comment: 12/05/2012 00:58:15 by livingonli)
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Comment by trojanrabbit on 12/04/2012 12:55:46
Morning.

Since I dislike anything to do with the Mannings and Mike Shanahan, there was probably no good outcome for me last night.

Comment by wickedpam on 12/04/2012 13:35:00
Morning

Comment by velveeta jones on 12/04/2012 13:39:04
Morning all. Raine, I'll call you later today maybe around noonish. Depends on what crisis I'm dealing with at the moment. LOL

Comment by Mondobubba on 12/04/2012 13:49:17
Morning

Comment by trojanrabbit on 12/04/2012 13:51:00
We don't have to worry any more, Willard found a job.

Comment by wickedpam on 12/04/2012 14:00:31
Quote by trojanrabbit:
We don't have to worry any more, Willard found a job.


I think it was a pity job, so he'll stop looking so pathetic


Comment by Raine on 12/04/2012 14:04:46
Quote by velveeta jones:
Morning all. Raine, I'll call you later today maybe around noonish. Depends on what crisis I'm dealing with at the moment. LOL
sounds good!

good morning!


Comment by Raine on 12/04/2012 14:13:51
Comment by Mondobubba on 12/04/2012 14:24:28
Quote by trojanrabbit:
We don't have to worry any more, Willard found a job.



Yeah, but it just a part time gig.

Comment by Raine on 12/04/2012 14:38:56
It amazes me that it took 20 years to finally come to a consensus about Gulf War syndrome.

Comment by Mondobubba on 12/04/2012 14:51:06
Quote by Raine:
It amazes me that it took 20 years to finally come to a consensus about Gulf War syndrome.



Well, there was that long period of official denial before anything got going.

Comment by TriSec on 12/04/2012 14:54:16
Not surprised at all. One of my compatriots at the store was in Vietnam while I was busy getting born. He knows plenty of guys still dealing with Agent Orange.



Comment by Raine on 12/04/2012 15:13:46
This might make you even more ill.
"Even if no weapon existed, the strength differential is so large that Belcher could have easily killed [his girlfriend Kasandra] Perkins in any number of ways."



Comment by Raine on 12/04/2012 15:20:36
Well, I'm hoping those sources are correct!

Elizabeth Warren Wins Senate Banking Committee Seat: Sources

Comment by TriSec on 12/04/2012 15:23:43
I would be willing to give up Martha's Vineyard if we could ship all the gun nuts there and quarantine them.

That, or maybe Cuttyhunk. (a real place!)



Comment by Scoopster on 12/04/2012 15:25:45
Comment by Raine on 12/04/2012 15:38:40
Comment by TriSec on 12/04/2012 15:56:05
Say, whoever is using the Romulan Timeflow Changing Device, you can turn it off now.

It's only 11:00??


Comment by Will in Chicago on 12/04/2012 16:00:59
TriSec, thanks for a great blog. I am glad to see some progress on the issue of Gulf War syndrome.

Trojanrabbit, I mentioned your Dad in Temple before the Mourner's Kaddish on Friday. I hope that you are feeling better.

For myself, I am busy with the job hunt. So, I will check in.

As for Dick Armey, I think that Tea Party 2.0 -- threatened by Grover Norquist -- is unlikely to happen without a big money backer.

Comment by Mondobubba on 12/04/2012 16:01:42



Wayne LaPierre is evil. He solution to gun violence is having a gun?

Comment by BobR on 12/04/2012 16:03:42
Quote by Raine:




Comment by Raine on 12/04/2012 16:07:21
Am I the only one who didn't know that Lindsey Graham adopted his sister?

Comment by Raine on 12/04/2012 16:09:52
Quote by Raine:
Am I the only one who didn't know that Lindsey Graham adopted his sister?
Now, This story says he justbecame her guardian.

Social Security. (added link)


Comment by clintster on 12/04/2012 16:56:04
Welcome to another edition of "Republicans Eating Their Own". Jim DeMint thinks Boehner is fighting for a tax hike.

PS the comments are sterling examples of free-range derp.

Comment by Will in Chicago on 12/04/2012 17:09:30
Quote by Raine:
Quote by Raine:
Am I the only one who didn't know that Lindsey Graham adopted his sister?
Now, This story says he justbecame her guardian.

Social Security. (added link)



Why do Republicans, such as Graham and Paul Ryan, who benefited from Social Security Insurance benefits want to deny others? It reeks of hypocrisy.

Clintster, it looks like the GOP is tearing itself apart. Now, I have to wonder how safe Boehner is in his leadership position.

Comment by TriSec on 12/04/2012 17:17:40
Comment by livingonli on 12/04/2012 17:20:06
Good day, all. It looks like the GOP's goal is just to let the crazy chain run off the cliff. Now, if it could only take a few of them with them.

Comment by Mondobubba on 12/04/2012 17:21:04



Let's hear it for the Sagus FD!

Comment by TriSec on 12/04/2012 17:32:36
I, your Loyal Trisec, and WWII geek, was stunned to learn of these battles whilst Reading "The Grand Alliance" by Sir Winston.

There's plenty of other things that took place during this timeframe that I well know about, but I was rather shocked to read about this rather unknown campaign.

Think I lost my WWII cred here, but then again I am a Pacific Theater guy, mostly.

Comment by Mondobubba on 12/04/2012 17:35:50
Quote by TriSec:
I, your Loyal Trisec, and WWII geek, was stunned to learn of these battles whilst Reading "The Grand Alliance" by Sir Winston.

There's plenty of other things that took place during this timeframe that I well know about, but I was rather shocked to read about this rather unknown campaign.

Think I lost my WWII cred here, but then again I am a Pacific Theater guy, mostly.


Well knock me over with a feather. I had no idea about this campaign either.

Comment by wickedpam on 12/04/2012 17:37:00
I have a question for those that know something about WWII era stuff - at home I have a brass cake plate that says Made in R.K.O. - rumor in the family has it that its made from an unexploded shell - do you guys know anything about it? I've tried the google and all I get is RKO studio's.

Comment by TriSec on 12/04/2012 17:46:36
YA know, it could actually be RKO studios...


But an aptly named cake baker, Harry Baker, from Hollywood, California, challenged conventional cake wisdom and started his own mini baking revolution. Baker, originally an insurance salesman and recreational cook, enjoyed all cakes, but dreamed of combining the richness of butter cake with the lightness of sponge cake...Baker's ambitious pursuit took years...in 1927, his efforts brought forth an upside-down cake that was described as light, tender, delicate, glamorous, and delicious, with sensational volume. Dessert lovers clamored for a taste, hoping to name Baker's reputed mystery ingredient. Baker doggedly guarded his secret...As word of Baker's miracle cake spread throughout Hollywood, orders soared beyond his capacity to fill them...Both MGM and RKO granted screen time to his creations, and chiffon cake as added to the menu at the Brown Derby restaurant...Almost twenty years passed before Baker went public with the recipe, timing the sale of his secret of the lifting of wartime restrictions.


This was Chiffon cake - from The Food Timeline.

Otherwise, all I could think of from the acronym was Occupied Korea, but they wouldn't be making cake plates out of Japanese shells now, would they?


Comment by wickedpam on 12/04/2012 17:50:59
Quote by TriSec:
YA know, it could actually be RKO studios...


But an aptly named cake baker, Harry Baker, from Hollywood, California, challenged conventional cake wisdom and started his own mini baking revolution. Baker, originally an insurance salesman and recreational cook, enjoyed all cakes, but dreamed of combining the richness of butter cake with the lightness of sponge cake...Baker's ambitious pursuit took years...in 1927, his efforts brought forth an upside-down cake that was described as light, tender, delicate, glamorous, and delicious, with sensational volume. Dessert lovers clamored for a taste, hoping to name Baker's reputed mystery ingredient. Baker doggedly guarded his secret...As word of Baker's miracle cake spread throughout Hollywood, orders soared beyond his capacity to fill them...Both MGM and RKO granted screen time to his creations, and chiffon cake as added to the menu at the Brown Derby restaurant...Almost twenty years passed before Baker went public with the recipe, timing the sale of his secret of the lifting of wartime restrictions.


This was Chiffon cake - from The Food Timeline.

Otherwise, all I could think of from the acronym was Occupied Korea, but they wouldn't be making cake plates out of Japanese shells now, would they?



who knew

I'm gonna have to take some pic of it - been trying to figure this out for years.


Comment by Mondobubba on 12/04/2012 17:52:40
Faith in humankind restored! Spoke with a wonderful positive woman!

Comment by livingonli on 12/04/2012 17:56:31
And the entire RKO film library is now owned by Time Warner since Turner got forced out of the board of his own company.

Comment by clintster on 12/04/2012 18:02:40
Quote by wickedpam:
I have a question for those that know something about WWII era stuff - at home I have a brass cake plate that says Made in R.K.O. - rumor in the family has it that its made from an unexploded shell - do you guys know anything about it? I've tried the google and all I get is RKO studio's.


On a hunch, I Googled RKO, and I think your cake pan may have been made in South Korea (RKO may mean Republic of Korea).

Comment by wickedpam on 12/04/2012 18:07:25
Quote by clintster:
Quote by wickedpam:
I have a question for those that know something about WWII era stuff - at home I have a brass cake plate that says Made in R.K.O. - rumor in the family has it that its made from an unexploded shell - do you guys know anything about it? I've tried the google and all I get is RKO studio's.


On a hunch, I Googled RKO, and I think your cake pan may have been made in South Korea (RKO may mean Republic of Korea).



hmmm - well it did come from my Aunt Regena's (think she was my great grandmothers sister?) estate, she brought back lots of stuff from Asia

Comment by TriSec on 12/04/2012 18:33:29
Well, it could also be "Really Krappy Objects", which is a novelty company that manufactures junk in Carjackistan.

Better check - could be particle board with brass paint.

* ducks incoming brick *



Comment by wickedpam on 12/04/2012 18:53:46
Quote by TriSec:
Well, it could also be "Really Krappy Objects", which is a novelty company that manufactures junk in Carjackistan.

Better check - could be particle board with brass paint.

* ducks incoming brick *



ya, I'm thinking no


Comment by Mondobubba on 12/04/2012 19:03:17
Cory Booker Goes on Food Stamps. Just to prove a point.

Comment by Mondobubba on 12/04/2012 19:05:09
Comment by TriSec on 12/04/2012 19:06:00
Exhales through clenched teeth...


The Hanukkah menorah is a sign of peace and joy, symbolic of a miracle in the Jewish religion.

But a menorah in Miami Beach, Fla., has also become an attraction for hate speech, with someone scribbling "you killed Jesus" on the base of the prominent Chabad Hanukkah display.

Rabbi Zev Katz, who put up the menorah, is disappointed.

"I hoped that people from other religions, we could all get along, we all have what we believe in, respect each other and live with each other," said Katz, of Chabad House in Miami Beach.





Comment by Mondobubba on 12/04/2012 19:10:51
Quote by TriSec:
Exhales through clenched teeth...


The Hanukkah menorah is a sign of peace and joy, symbolic of a miracle in the Jewish religion.

But a menorah in Miami Beach, Fla., has also become an attraction for hate speech, with someone scribbling "you killed Jesus" on the base of the prominent Chabad Hanukkah display.

Rabbi Zev Katz, who put up the menorah, is disappointed.

"I hoped that people from other religions, we could all get along, we all have what we believe in, respect each other and live with each other," said Katz, of Chabad House in Miami Beach.






Stay KKKlasy South Florida hate groups! Stay KKKlasy.

Comment by Mondobubba on 12/04/2012 19:12:59
You know, I work with the most inattentive, absent-minded bunch of in Florida. There has been a stream of emails today about found car keys, sunglasses and cellphones. How do you forget this stuff.

Comment by TriSec on 12/04/2012 19:22:28
OK gang, I'll soon be off to our year-end all staff meeting. Then it's off to the store and hopefully a good class to teach tonight.

Won't be back until tomorrow am, so everybody play nice!



Comment by Raine on 12/04/2012 19:24:01
Quote by clintster:
Welcome to another edition of "Republicans Eating Their Own". Jim DeMint thinks Boehner is fighting for a tax hike.

PS the comments are sterling examples of free-range derp.
What I find amazingis how few Republicans are speaking out on behalf of Boner.


Comment by Mondobubba on 12/04/2012 19:31:15
Comment by Mondobubba on 12/04/2012 19:32:48
Quote by Raine:
Quote by clintster:
Welcome to another edition of "Republicans Eating Their Own". Jim DeMint thinks Boehner is fighting for a tax hike.

PS the comments are sterling examples of free-range derp.
What I find amazingis how few Republicans are speaking out on behalf of Boner.



Since the Boner has about 0 influence or actual power at this point, I'm surprised that Cantor isn't going, " Shhhh John, grownups are speaking!"

Comment by wickedpam on 12/04/2012 20:27:36