Literature DB >> 23257977

Meteorological and intelligence evidence of long-distance transit of chemical weapons fallout from bombing early in the 1991 Persian Gulf War.

James J Tuite1, Robert W Haley.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Coalition bombings on the night of 18-19 January 1991, early in the Gulf War, targeted the Iraqi chemical weapons infrastructure. On 19 January 1991, nerve agent alarms sounded within Coalition positions hundreds of kilometers to the south, and the trace presence of sarin vapor was identified by multiple technologies. Considering only surface dispersion of plumes from explosions, officials concluded that the absence of casualties around bombed sites precluded long-distance transit of debris to US troop positions to explain the alarms and detections. Consequently, they were discounted as false positives, and low-level nerve agent exposure early in the air war was disregarded in epidemiologic investigations of chronic illnesses. INTELLIGENCE DATA: Newly assembled evidence indicates that plumes from those nighttime bombings of Iraqi chemical facilities would have traversed the stable nocturnal boundary layer and penetrated the residual layer where they would be susceptible to rapid transit by supergeostrophic winds. This explanation is supported by plume height predictions, available weather charts, weather satellite images showing transit of a hot air mass, effects of solar mixing of atmospheric layers, and observations of a stationary weather front and thermal inversion in the region.
CONCLUSIONS: Current evidence supports long-distance transit. Epidemiologic studies of chronic postwar illness should be reassessed using veterans' reports of hearing nerve agent alarms as the measure of exposure.
Copyright © 2012 S. Karger AG, Basel.

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2012        PMID: 23257977     DOI: 10.1159/000345123

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Neuroepidemiology        ISSN: 0251-5350            Impact factor:   3.282


  15 in total

1.  Associations between the self-reported frequency of hearing chemical alarms in theater and regional brain volume in Gulf War Veterans.

Authors:  Linda L Chao; Rosemary Reeb; Iva L Esparza; Linda R Abadjian
Journal:  Neurotoxicology       Date:  2016-02-23       Impact factor: 4.294

2.  Genome-wide transcriptome architecture in a mouse model of Gulf War Illness.

Authors:  Fuyi Xu; David G Ashbrook; Jun Gao; Athena Starlard-Davenport; Wenyuan Zhao; Diane B Miller; James P O'Callaghan; Robert W Williams; Byron C Jones; Lu Lu
Journal:  Brain Behav Immun       Date:  2020-06-20       Impact factor: 7.217

Review 3.  Novel therapeutics for treating organophosphate-induced status epilepticus co-morbidities, based on changes in calcium homeostasis.

Authors:  Laxmikant S Deshpande; Robert J DeLorenzo
Journal:  Neurobiol Dis       Date:  2019-03-12       Impact factor: 5.996

4.  Central Executive Dysfunction and Deferred Prefrontal Processing in Veterans with Gulf War Illness.

Authors:  Nicholas A Hubbard; Joanna L Hutchison; Michael A Motes; Ehsan Shokri-Kojori; Ilana J Bennett; Ryan M Brigante; Robert W Haley; Bart Rypma
Journal:  Clin Psychol Sci       Date:  2014-05-01

Review 5.  Gulf War Illness: Mechanisms Underlying Brain Dysfunction and Promising Therapeutic Strategies.

Authors:  Brandon Dickey; Leelavathi N Madhu; Ashok K Shetty
Journal:  Pharmacol Ther       Date:  2020-10-24       Impact factor: 12.310

6.  Gulf War agent exposure causes impairment of long-term memory formation and neuropathological changes in a mouse model of Gulf War Illness.

Authors:  Zuchra Zakirova; Miles Tweed; Gogce Crynen; Jon Reed; Laila Abdullah; Nadee Nissanka; Myles Mullan; Michael J Mullan; Venkatarajan Mathura; Fiona Crawford; Ghania Ait-Ghezala
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2015-03-18       Impact factor: 3.240

7.  A Chronic Longitudinal Characterization of Neurobehavioral and Neuropathological Cognitive Impairment in a Mouse Model of Gulf War Agent Exposure.

Authors:  Zuchra Zakirova; Gogce Crynen; Samira Hassan; Laila Abdullah; Lauren Horne; Venkatarajan Mathura; Fiona Crawford; Ghania Ait-Ghezala
Journal:  Front Integr Neurosci       Date:  2016-01-12

Review 8.  Recent research on Gulf War illness and other health problems in veterans of the 1991 Gulf War: Effects of toxicant exposures during deployment.

Authors:  Roberta F White; Lea Steele; James P O'Callaghan; Kimberly Sullivan; James H Binns; Beatrice A Golomb; Floyd E Bloom; James A Bunker; Fiona Crawford; Joel C Graves; Anthony Hardie; Nancy Klimas; Marguerite Knox; William J Meggs; Jack Melling; Martin A Philbert; Rachel Grashow
Journal:  Cortex       Date:  2015-09-25       Impact factor: 4.027

9.  Cognitive Slowing in Gulf War Illness Predicts Executive Network Hyperconnectivity: Study in a Population-Representative Sample.

Authors:  Monroe P Turner; Nicholas A Hubbard; Lyndahl M Himes; Shawheen Faghihahmadabadi; Joanna L Hutchison; Ilana J Bennett; Michael A Motes; Robert W Haley; Bart Rypma
Journal:  Neuroimage Clin       Date:  2016-08-26       Impact factor: 4.881

10.  Epigenetic impacts of stress priming of the neuroinflammatory response to sarin surrogate in mice: a model of Gulf War illness.

Authors:  David G Ashbrook; Benjamin Hing; Lindsay T Michalovicz; Kimberly A Kelly; Julie V Miller; Wilfred C de Vega; Diane B Miller; Gordon Broderick; James P O'Callaghan; Patrick O McGowan
Journal:  J Neuroinflammation       Date:  2018-03-17       Impact factor: 8.322

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