IS THERE A GULF-WAR SYNDROME - SEARCHING FOR SYNDROMES BY FACTOR-ANALYSIS OF SYMPTOMS

Citation
Rw. Haley et al., IS THERE A GULF-WAR SYNDROME - SEARCHING FOR SYNDROMES BY FACTOR-ANALYSIS OF SYMPTOMS, JAMA, the journal of the American Medical Association, 277(3), 1997, pp. 215-222
Citations number
37
Categorie Soggetti
Medicine, General & Internal
ISSN journal
00987484
Volume
277
Issue
3
Year of publication
1997
Pages
215 - 222
Database
ISI
SICI code
0098-7484(1997)277:3<215:ITAGS->2.0.ZU;2-C
Abstract
Objective.-To search for syndromes in Persian Gulf War veterans. Parti cipants.-Two hundred forty-nine (41%) of the 606 Gulf War veterans of the Twenty-fourth Reserve Naval Mobile Construction Battalion living i n 5 south-eastern states participated; 145 (58%) had retired from serv ice, and the rest were still serving in the battalion. Design.-Partici pants completed a standardized survey booklet measuring the anatomical distributions or characteristics of each symptom, a booklet measuring wartime exposures, and a standard psychological personality assessmen t inventory. Two-stage factor analysis was used to disentangle ambiguo us symptoms and identify syndromes. Main Outcome Measures.-Factor anal ysis-derived syndromes, Results.-Of 249 participants, 175 (70%) report ed having had serious health problems that most attributed to the war, and 74 (30%) reported no serious health problems. Principal factor an alysis yielded 6 syndrome factors, explaining 71% of the variance. Dic hotomized syndrome indicators identified the syndromes in 63 veterans (25%). Syndromes 1 (''impaired cognition,'' characterized by problems with attention, memory, and reasoning, as well as insomnia, depression , daytime sleepiness, and headaches), 2 (''confusion-ataxia,'' charact erized by problems with thinking, disorientation, balance disturbances , vertigo, and impotence), and 3 (''arthro-myo-neuropathy,'' character ized by joint and muscle pains, muscle fatigue, difficulty lifting, an d extremity paresthesias) represented strongly clustered symptoms; whe reas, syndromes 4 (''phobia-apraxia''), 5 (''fever-adenopathy''), and 6 (''weakness-incontinence'') involved weaker clustering and mostly ov erlapped syndromes 2 and 3. Veterans with syndrome 2 were 12.5 times ( 95% confidence interval, 3.5-44.8) more likely to be unemployed than t hose with no health problems. A psychological profile, found in 48.4% of those with the syndromes, differed from posttraumatic stress disord er, depression, somatoform disorder, and malingering. Conclusion.-Thes e findings support the hypothesis that clusters of symptoms of many Gu lf War, veterans represent discrete factor analysis-derived syndromes that appear to reflect a spectrum of neurologic injury involving the c entral, peripheral, and autonomic nervous systems.