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Agent Orange, the chemical defoliant widely used during the Vietnam War by US forces, is associated with diabetes found in American veterans, a Pentagon study said.
Agent Orange, the chemical defoliant widely used during the Vietnam War by US
forces, is associated with diabetes found in American veterans, a Pentagon study
said.
"Results from the 2002 physical examination support adult-onset diabetes
as the most important health problem seen in the Air Force Health Study"
among veterans examined, the Pentagon said in a statement.
Agent Orange contains the highly toxic agent dioxin.
The results "suggest that as dioxin levels increase, not only are the
presence and severity of adult-onset diabetes increased, but the time to onset
of the disease is decreased."
Type 2 diabetes is the most common, becoming apparent around middle age and
is characterized by a resistance to insulin and a relative lack of insulin secretion.
"A 166 percent increase in diabetes requiring insulin control was seen
in those with the highest levels of dioxin" a finding consistent with animal
studies, it added.
The results were gathered from a 2002 medical examination of 1,951 Vietnam
veterans, an extension of an ongoing epidemiology study begun in 1982.
The agent orange results confirm reports dating from 1992 and 1997.
Veterans examined were among military who sprayed herbicides in Vietnam between
1962 and 1971 to destroy vegetation thus denying the North Vietnamese Army cover
and access to crops.
The Americans were exposed to the toxic agent during missions or when carrying
out maintenance work on aircraft.
A US medical report also established a link between exposure to agent orange
and chronic lymphoid leukemia, also opening the way to compensation for American
veterans.