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Medical Co-morbidities of VCD in the military

Joyce Gurevich-Uvena Joseph Parker Thomas Fitzpatrick Matthew Makashay Michelle Perello Elizabeth Blair Nancy Pearl Solomon. Department of Internal Medicine Pulmonary Critical Care Department of Surgery Army Audiology and Speech Center Otolaryngology Head and Neck Service.

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Medical Co-morbidities of VCD in the military

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  1. Joyce Gurevich-Uvena Joseph Parker Thomas Fitzpatrick Matthew Makashay Michelle Perello Elizabeth Blair Nancy Pearl Solomon Department of Internal Medicine Pulmonary Critical Care Department of Surgery Army Audiology and Speech Center Otolaryngology Head and Neck Service Medical Co-morbidities of VCD in the military Walter Reed Army Medical Center, Washington DC The views expressed are those of the authors and do not reflect the official policy of the Department of the Army, the Department of Defense or the US Government.

  2. Background • Common co-morbidities • Asthma • GERD • Allergies + PND • Chronic rhinosinusitis (Balkissoon, 2007; Brugman, 2003; Doshi & Weinberger, 2004; Mikita & Mikita, 2006; Mikita & Parker, 2006; Newman, Mason & Schmaling, 1995)

  3. Background • More common in females than males • 3.2:1 (Brugman, 2003) • Paucity of data on VCD in military population

  4. VCD Studies in the Military • Craig, Sitz, Squire, Smith, & Carpenter (1992) • 2 women, psychogenic • Morris, Deal, Bean, Grbach, & Morgan (1999) • 40 active duty military with exertional dyspnea • VCD positive: 7 females, 3 males (2.3:1) • VCD negative: 10 females, 20 males (0.5:1) • Mikita & Parker (2006) • 25 patients diagnosed with VCD • 12 women, 13 men

  5. Background • VCD Risk factors • Strenuous exercise • Psychological stress • Military Factors • Daily physical activity requirements • Bi-annual Military Physical Fitness Test • High stress, exacerbated during war-time (Craig et al., 1992; Morris et al., 1999)

  6. Rationale • The incidence of the clinical characteristics of VCD are not well established in the military population.

  7. Purpose • To describe the demographic characteristics of patients diagnosed with VCD seen at Walter Reed Army Medical Center • To identify co-morbid conditions associated with VCD in these patients

  8. Methods • Retrospective chart review • Case history interview with speech-language pathologist • Supplemented with diagnostic tests as available

  9. Methods • 265 consecutive patients from 1996-2001 diagnosed with VCD

  10. Methods • Referred to Speech Pathology Clinic Referral Sources

  11. Selected data Age Gender Service Distribution Service Status Rank Compiled database in Excel GERD Asthma Allergies PND Methods

  12. Results

  13. Age

  14. Gender • Female 171 • Male 94 • Female:Male (1.8:1)* *Females represent 10.8% of military

  15. Service Distribution

  16. Service Status

  17. Service Status by Gender

  18. Active-Duty Rank/Pay Grade

  19. VCD and Co-Morbidities

  20. Number of Co-Morbidities

  21. Number of Co-Morbidities for Active vs. Non-Active Duty

  22. Summary of Demographics • 265 patients referred to WRAMC • 65% female, 35% male (1.8:1) • 48% active duty • Female:male ratio differed between active (1.2:1) and non-active duty (2.8:1)

  23. Summary of Co-Morbidities • Co-morbid conditions were common • GERD (33%) • Allergies (32%) • Asthma (20%) • PND (15%) • 20% of patients presented with VCD alone • 51% of patients had two or more co-morbidities • Active-duty patients tended to have fewer co-morbidities than non-active duty patients (p=.058)

  24. Conclusions • WRAMC Speech Pathology Clinic has had a substantial number of referrals for VCD • Referrals equally represented active and non-active duty patients • Female to male ratio of patients with VCD in the military differs from other settings, presumably because of the predominantly male population • GERD and allergies were the most common co-morbidities • Reinforces the importance of assessing co-morbid factors and making appropriate referrals.

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