Publication Detail
The publication detail shows the title, authors (with indicators showing other profiled authors), information on the publishing organization, abstract and a link to the article in PubMed. This abstract is what is used to create the fingerprint of the publication within Collexis applications. If any grants are referenced by the publication, they will be listed here as well.
Postservice mortality of US Air Force veterans occupationally exposed to herbicides in Vietnam: 15-year follow-up.
Michalek J E; Ketchum N S; Akhtar F Z (Profiled Author: Michalek, Joel)
Air Force Research Laboratory, Brooks Air Force Base, TX 78235-5250, USA.
American journal of epidemiology 1998;148(8):786-92.
The US Air Force continues to assess the mortality of veterans of Operation Ranch Hand, the unit responsible for aerially spraying herbicides in Vietnam. The authors of this study found that the cumulative all-cause mortality experience of these veterans was not different from that expected (standardized mortality ratio (SMR) = 1.0). Overall, cause-specific mortality did not differ from that expected regarding deaths from accidents, cancer, or circulatory system diseases, but the authors found that there was an increased number of deaths due to digestive diseases (SMR = 1.7, 95% confidence interval (CI) 0.9-3.2). When analyzing by military occupation, they found an increase in the number of deaths caused by circulatory system diseases (SMR = 1.5, 95% CI 1.0-2.2) among enlisted ground personnel, the subgroup with the highest dioxin levels. Most of the increase in the number of deaths from digestive diseases was caused by chronic liver disease and cirrhosis, and more than half of the increase in the number of deaths from circulatory system diseases was a result of atherosclerotic heart disease. In the subgroup of Ranch Hand veterans who had survived more than 20 years since their military service in Southeast Asia, the authors found no significant increase in the risk of death due to cancer at all sites (SMR = 1.1) and a nonsignificant increase in the number of deaths due to cancers of the bronchus and lung (SMR = 1.3).
Scientific Context
This section shows information related to the publication - computed using the fingerprint of the publication - including related publications, related experts and related grants with fingerprints representing significant amounts of overlap between their fingerprint and this publication. The red dots indicate whether those experts or terms appear within the publication, thereby showing potential and actual connections.
Related Grants
Related Publications
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1.
2004Akhtar Fatema Z; Garabrant David H; Ketchum Norma S; Michalek Joel E
Cancer in US Air Force veterans of the Vietnam War.
Journal of occupational and environmental medicine / American College of Occupational and Environmental Medicine 2004;46(2):123-36. -
2.
2005Ketchum Norma S; Michalek Joel E
Military medicine 2005;170(5):406-13. -
3.
1995Wolfe W H; Michalek J E; Miner J C; Rahe A J; Moore C A; Needham L L; Patterson D G
Paternal serum dioxin and reproductive outcomes among veterans of Operation Ranch Hand.
Epidemiology (Cambridge, Mass.) 1995;6(1):17-22.
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