Abstract

Military personnel deployed to Iraq and Afghanistan, from 2004 to the present, has served in a setting of unique environmental conditions. Among these are exposures to burning trash in open air "burn pits" lit on fire with jet fuel JP-8. Depending on trash burned--water bottles, styrofoam trays, medical waste, unexploded munitions, and computers--toxins may be released such as dioxins and n-hexane and benzene. Particulate matter air pollution culminates from these fires and fumes. Additional environmental exposures entail sandstorms (Haboob, Shamal, and Sharqi) which differ in direction and relationship to rain. These wars saw the first use of improvised explosive devices (roadside phosphate bombs),as well as vehicle improvised explosive devices (car bombs), which not only potentially aerosolize metals, but also create shock waves to induce lung injury via blast overpressure. Conventional mortar rounds are also used by Al Qaeda in both Iraq and Afghanistan. Outdoor aeroallergens from date palm trees are prevalent in southern Iraq by the Tigris and Euphrates rivers, while indoor aeroallergen aspergillus predominates during the rainy season. High altitude lung disease may also compound the problem, particularly in Kandahar, Afghanistan. Clinically, soldiers may present with new-onset asthma or fixed airway obstruction. Some have constrictive bronchiolitis and vascular remodeling on open lung biopsy - despite having normal spirometry and chest xrays and CT scans of the chest. Others have been found to have titanium and other metals in the lung (rare in nature). Still others have fulminant biopsy-proven sarcoidiosis. We found DNA probe-positive Mycobacterium Avium Complex in lung from a soldier who had pneumonia, while serving near stagnant water and camels and goats outside Abu Gharib. This review highlights potential exposures, clinical syndromes, and the Denver Working Group recommendations on post-deployment health.

Highlights

  • For a variety of reasons, U.S soldiers deployed to Iraq between the years 2004-2011, and Afghanistan from 2004-present, have been assigned extended or multiple tours of duty, Szema often 1 year or longer at a time

  • In Afghanistan, there are many small bases without incinerators, so trash is burned with JP-8 in burn pits as well, leading to aerosolized particulate matter air pollution

  • Depending on the substances burned, dioxins and n-hexane may be aerosolized, for example, during the burning of plastic water bottles, styrofoam breakfast trays, medical waste, unexploded munitions, electronic devices/computers. This era of warfare led to the use of roadside Improvised Explosive Devices (IEDs) and VIEDS by the insurgency, resulting in detonation of vehicles, which aerosolizes metal

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Summary

Introduction

Szema often 1 year or longer at a time. As a result, they have been increasingly exposed to unfavorable environmental conditions, which are dusty and harsh. (Figure 1). Inhalation of small (

Constrictive Bronchiolitis after Deployment to Iraq
Findings
Future Research Trends
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