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MILITARY: Brain-injured Marines to test new treatment

  • Saturday, April 03, 2010 12:39
    Message # 320035
    Deleted user

    MILITARY: Brain-injured Marines to test new treatment

    Camp Pendleton troops will be first to undergo experimental technique

    buy this photo Pentagon researchers are using pressurized chambers in combination with pure oxygen to treat brain-injured troops at Camp Pendleton and other bases around the country. (Courtesy Photo)

    • MILITARY: Brain-injured Marines to test new treatment
    • MILITARY: Brain-injured Marines to test new treatment

    Dozens of brain-injured Camp Pendleton troops from the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan soon will climb inside a pressurized chamber and breathe pure oxygen to see whether the treatment speeds their recovery.

    Up to 100 Marines will take part in the experiment, which will measure whether the technique can ease the headaches, memory loss and other ailments from the injury most often suffered in roadside bomb attacks.

    "Camp Pendleton's role is pivotal for us," U.S. Army Col. Richard Ricciardi, at the Defense Centers of Excellence for Psychological Health and Traumatic Brain Injury, said Friday. "Any individual who has deployed and suffers from traumatic brain injury might be eligible."

    Troops with lingering effects from the injury are often assigned to the base's Wounded Warrior Battalion, and most of those who undergo the treatment will be drawn from its ranks.

    The battalion's executive officer, Maj. Gary Zegley, said the experiment is a welcome "exploration of any new treatment regimen that could help wounded Marines."

    During a telephone interview from his office at the Defense Centers for Excellence in Virginia, Ricciardi said the trial study was among several commissioned in recent months by the Pentagon as the medical community works to improve brain injury care.

    "It's one part of the arsenal of treatments being tested across the system to tackle this challenging problem and do the right thing for our warriors," he said.

    A nurse practitioner, Ricciardi specializes in research and program evaluation.

    He was chief of nursing research at Walter Reed Army Medical Center before joining the Defense Centers.

    About 7,000 Camp Pendleton troops are serving in Afghanistan, including about 4,500 Marines and sailors who left in the past couple of weeks as part of the 30,000-troop surge ordered by President Barack Obama.

    Traumatic brain injury has emerged as a common injury among troops in Iraq and Afghanistan, where anti-government forces rely on homemade bombs as a primary weapon.

    Improvements in protective gear and battlefield emergency medicine have resulted in more troops surviving bomb blasts.

    As a result, about 134,000 U.S. troops have been treated for brain injuries since the 2003 start of the Iraq war, according to Pentagon statistics.

    A large chamber inside a trailer near Naval Hospital Camp Pendleton is where the troops will undergo the hourlong procedure for five days a week over 2 1/2 months.

    Pressure inside the hyperbaric chamber will be equivalent to what divers experience at about 20 feet under water.

    The pressurization forces pure oxygen into the cells. The experiment tests whether the repeated trips to the chamber speeds healing, Ricciardi said.

    Most of the troops will breathe pure oxygen, but a control group will breathe normal air under near-similar pressure conditions to test the results between the two sets, Ricciardi said.

    Camp Pendleton's role is to help establish the precise treatment regimen and baseline testing that troops will undergo.

    After the trial period, researchers will evaluate the Marines' experience and then refine the testing protocol when a larger test, administered to more troops at Camp Pendleton and other bases around the country, begins late this year or in early 2011.

    When the larger test begins, troops will be flown with a buddy to Fort Carson, Colo., where they will undergo a battery of tests conducted over four days before returning to their home base for the treatment.

    When the treatment ends, the troops will be flown back to Colorado for a final assessment.

    The results of all the testing, which is expected to involve about 300 U.S. troops, will be known by late 2012 or early 2013, Ricciardi said.

    Some clinical research shows the hyperbaric treatment has helped people with brain injuries, but not enough to say so conclusively.

    "We certainly hope that it provides the benefits we're looking for," Ricciardi said. "It's never been done the way we are going to try it, and Camp Pendleton is helping make sure we have the testing methodology down pat."

    Call staff writer Mark Walker at 760-740-3529.

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