Boston Sunday Globe

How exposure to Agent Orange damages the brain

- Alexa Gagosz can be reached at alexa.gagosz@globe.com. Follow her @alexagagos­z and on Instagram @AlexaGagos­z.

PROVIDENCE — Exposure to Agent Orange is known to have caused birth defects and developmen­tal disabiliti­es in babies born to some women in the vicinity of military fighting during the Vietnam War, according to government reports. The United States sprayed nearly 20 million gallons of Agent Orange during the war, when hundreds of thousands of US soldiers were exposed to it — many of whom were drafted into military service.

In the decades since the war ended, studies have shown that exposure to Agent Orange, a synthetic defoliatin­g herbicide, was associated with an increased risk of certain cancers, diabetes, and cardiovasc­ular disease.

Until recently, the long-term impact of Agent Orange exposure on the brain has been a mystery. But a new study at Brown University reveals a link between Agent Orange and certain aging-associated diseases, including how this wartime chemical compound can lead to neurodegen­erative diseases similar to Alzheimer’s.

Dr. Suzanne M. De La Monte, a Brown University physicians­cientist and a lead author on the study, said her findings could have critical implicatio­ns for aging veterans who were exposed to Agent Orange during the Vietnam War.

Q. What inspired you to begin looking into Agent Orange exposure?

A. Years ago, a veteran called me up and said he had been denied help by Veterans Affairs. He explained he had been exposed to Agent Orange and had all of these problems. At the time, I didn’t know anything about it, but he was only asking to have a hearing and get some help. I went over his record, did some research, and wrote a convincing letter to get him a hearing and at least some coverage to address his medical issues. This poor man was suffering from all of these diseases as a veteran. It inspired me to find a stronger connection between exposure and correspond­ing, lifelong complicati­ons in hopes that something could be done so our veterans could get the care and coverage they deserve.

Q. What do we know about the exposure to Agent Orange, and how did you prepare for this study?

A. The goal of this research was to dive into the long-term effects of Agent Orange exposure decades earlier. Much of the initial work that we did was to do an epidemiolo­gical survey of veterans who had been exposed, and it was then that it became clear that they had quite a breadth of diseases, including increased rates of diabetes, skin disease, lots of cancers (which are still being identified), and then neuropathi­es that were debilitati­ng. There was a suggestion that perhaps they had neurodegen­eration, which was becoming evident. The rates of both Parkinson’s disease and Alzheimer’s tend to be much higher among the people who have some kind of exposure to Agent Orange.

Q. Is it hard to prove that these diseases or conditions are due to Agent Orange exposure and not just due to natural aging?

A. It’s hard to prove because you’re looking at a population in age who would ordinarily be in the group to get an aging-associated disease. But if the rates are higher, you have to suspect that there’s an additive effect, especially if there are no genetic or risk factors associated with it. We tested our hypothesis through experiment­s: Is it possible that exposure to these agents causes a neurologic­al disease? And do those neurologic­al diseases that you get to look at resemble anything that we know of that is like Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s?

Q. How do you prove these findings to the military?

A. You prove it experiment­ally, and that’s by looking at what’s in Agent Orange. There are two main toxins in Agent Orange, which we tested in the laboratory to see if the brain develops damage, and if that damage is what resembles what one gets in the early stages of Alzheimer’s. We investigat­ed the effects of the toxins on markers of Alzheimer’s neurodegen­eration using the samples from the frontal lobes of laboratory rats.

Q. Is Agent Orange still used today?

A. The use was prohibited by the United States in 1971. Yet, the chemicals have remained in the environmen­t, and there’s uncontroll­ed use of the toxins in herbicide and pesticide products. The use has been so widespread that one in three Americans has biomarker evidence of prior exposure.

The two main constituen­ts of Agent Orange are 2,4-dichloroph­enoxyaceti­c acid and 2,4,5-trichloro-phenoxyace­tic acid. The toxic effects of 2,4-dichloroph­enoxyaceti­c acid are known, but federal agencies have not banned its use.

Q. So, technicall­y, we’re still being exposed to these toxins?

A. These toxins are used in some herbicides. It’s everywhere. If you get your lawn done by a service, or purchased a product at a hardware store, this toxin is likely in it. They are in the water; they are everywhere. We’ve all been exposed.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS/FILE 1966 ?? A US Air Force C-123 flies low along a South Vietnamese highway spraying defoliants in 1966. Dr. Suzanne M. De La Monte is studying how veterans exposed are more prone to diseases.
ASSOCIATED PRESS/FILE 1966 A US Air Force C-123 flies low along a South Vietnamese highway spraying defoliants in 1966. Dr. Suzanne M. De La Monte is studying how veterans exposed are more prone to diseases.
 ?? BROWN UNIVERSITY ??
BROWN UNIVERSITY

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