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Report of Autonomic Symptoms in a Clinical Sample of Veterans with Gulf War Illness.

Military Medicine 2018 March 2
Introduction: Previous studies suggest that autonomic dysfunction may be an underlying factor in Gulf War Illness. This study examined self-reported symptoms of autonomic dysfunction and their relationship with physical functioning among veterans with Gulf War Illness.

Materials and Methods: We abstracted medical records of Gulf War Veterans clinically evaluated at the New Jersey War Related Illness and Injury Study Center between 2010 and 2016. The outcome measure was the Veteran version of the Short Form Health Survey (VR-36) physical functioning scale. Autonomic function was assessed using a composite variable constructed from the chart abstraction to mimic the Composite Autonomic Symptom Scale (COMPASS-31).

Results: Seventy-six veterans were included in the final analysis. The autonomic symptom burden score was 45 (±14). Increased autonomic symptom burden, greater mental health burden (PTSD/depression), and greater body mass index were individually associated with poorer physical functioning. A general linear regression containing these variables revealed that patients with both PTSD and depression (b = -15.2, p = 0.03) or either PTSD or depression (b = -22.7, p < 0.01) had lower physical functioning than those without; the other variables became not significant (body mass index: p = 0.07; autonomic function: p = 0.89).

Conclusion: The average autonomic function score indicated significant burden in Gulf War Veterans, consistent with published research. We did not detect an independent association between autonomic symptom burden and physical functioning, likely due to the non-specific nature of the measure used to capture autonomic symptoms or the stronger association between mental health conditions and physical functioning. Future work utilizing valid and standardized instruments to clinically evaluate autonomic function is warranted.

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