
Wounded Iraq war veteran sits among injured war veterans during a news conference held by the Wounded Warrior Project in Washington September 12, 2007.
Post-traumatic epilepsy, as the seizure disorder is known, is common after brain injuries sustained in battle.
"Soldiers have more severe injuries than what commonly occurs in the civilian populations," Dr. L. James Willmore, who was not involved in the new study, told Reuters Health.
"With severe injury, almost half develop epilepsy. It's difficult to treat and a persisting problem," added Willmore, an epilepsy expert at Saint Louis University in Missouri and a former medical officer in the U.S. Navy.
The new study, published Monday in the journal Neurology, is part of the National Naval Medical Center's long-term efforts to follow Vietnam vets with head injuries. It's the third evaluation of this group, performed 35 years after the original damage.
Most of the injuries involved penetration of the skull, for instance by shrapnel. Through interviews with the vets, a neurologist determined that 87 out of 199 (44 percent) suffered from post-traumatic epilepsy.










Comment: Read the following articles carried on SOTT about the "specific uncertainties" of nano materials, especially in food:
Food Industry 'Too Secretive' Over Nanotechnology
Alert over the march of the 'grey goo' in nanotechnology Frankenfoods
Nanotechnology - the new threat to food - from the article: On the subject of 'further loss of privacy as nano surveillance tracks each step in the food chain' read the following:
Big Pharma Nanotechnology Encodes Pills with Tracking Data That You Swallow