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Dichotomous factor analysis of symptoms reported by UK and US veterans of the 1991 Gulf War

BACKGROUND: Factor analysis is one of the most used statistical techniques to analyze the inter-relationships among symptoms reported by Gulf War veterans. The objective of this study was to apply factor analyses to binary symptom data from the UK study of Gulf War illness and the US Air Force study...

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Autores principales: Nisenbaum, Rosane, Ismail, Khalida, Wessely, Simon, Unwin, Catherine, Hull, Lisa, Reeves, William C
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2004
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC519030/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/15347423
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1478-7954-2-8
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author Nisenbaum, Rosane
Ismail, Khalida
Wessely, Simon
Unwin, Catherine
Hull, Lisa
Reeves, William C
author_facet Nisenbaum, Rosane
Ismail, Khalida
Wessely, Simon
Unwin, Catherine
Hull, Lisa
Reeves, William C
author_sort Nisenbaum, Rosane
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Factor analysis is one of the most used statistical techniques to analyze the inter-relationships among symptoms reported by Gulf War veterans. The objective of this study was to apply factor analyses to binary symptom data from the UK study of Gulf War illness and the US Air Force study of Gulf War veterans, and to compare the symptom domains derived from the distinct samples. METHODS: UK veterans of the 1991 Gulf War (n = 3,454), individuals deployed to Bosnia on U.N. peacekeeping operations (n = 1,979) and Gulf War-era servicemen (n = 2,577) who were not deployed to the Gulf were surveyed in 1997–1998, and US 1991 Gulf War veterans from four Air Force units (n = 1,163) were surveyed in 1995 to collect health characteristics including symptoms. Each sample was randomly split in half for exploratory and confirmatory dichotomous factor analyses with promax oblique rotation. RESULTS: Four correlated factors were identified in each of the samples. Three factors (Respiratory, Mood-Cognition, Peripheral Nervous) overlapped considerably across the UK cohorts. The Gastrointestinal/Urogenital factor in the UK Gulf cohort was noticeably different from the Gastrointestinal factor identified from the Bosnia and Era cohorts. Symptoms from Gulf War UK and U.S cohorts yielded similar Gastrointestinal, Respiratory and Mood-Cognition factors, despite differences in symptom inventories between the two surveys. A Musculoskeletal factor was only elicited from the US Gulf sample. CONCLUSION: Findings of this report are consistent with those from other factor analysis studies that identified similar symptom dimensions between Gulf and non-Gulf War veterans, except that the Gastrointestinal factor in Gulf veterans included other symptom types. Correlations among factors raise the question as to whether there is a general illness, even if not unique to Gulf veterans, representing the common pathway underlying the identified factors. Hierarchical factor analysis models may be useful to address this issue.
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spelling pubmed-5190302004-09-29 Dichotomous factor analysis of symptoms reported by UK and US veterans of the 1991 Gulf War Nisenbaum, Rosane Ismail, Khalida Wessely, Simon Unwin, Catherine Hull, Lisa Reeves, William C Popul Health Metr Research BACKGROUND: Factor analysis is one of the most used statistical techniques to analyze the inter-relationships among symptoms reported by Gulf War veterans. The objective of this study was to apply factor analyses to binary symptom data from the UK study of Gulf War illness and the US Air Force study of Gulf War veterans, and to compare the symptom domains derived from the distinct samples. METHODS: UK veterans of the 1991 Gulf War (n = 3,454), individuals deployed to Bosnia on U.N. peacekeeping operations (n = 1,979) and Gulf War-era servicemen (n = 2,577) who were not deployed to the Gulf were surveyed in 1997–1998, and US 1991 Gulf War veterans from four Air Force units (n = 1,163) were surveyed in 1995 to collect health characteristics including symptoms. Each sample was randomly split in half for exploratory and confirmatory dichotomous factor analyses with promax oblique rotation. RESULTS: Four correlated factors were identified in each of the samples. Three factors (Respiratory, Mood-Cognition, Peripheral Nervous) overlapped considerably across the UK cohorts. The Gastrointestinal/Urogenital factor in the UK Gulf cohort was noticeably different from the Gastrointestinal factor identified from the Bosnia and Era cohorts. Symptoms from Gulf War UK and U.S cohorts yielded similar Gastrointestinal, Respiratory and Mood-Cognition factors, despite differences in symptom inventories between the two surveys. A Musculoskeletal factor was only elicited from the US Gulf sample. CONCLUSION: Findings of this report are consistent with those from other factor analysis studies that identified similar symptom dimensions between Gulf and non-Gulf War veterans, except that the Gastrointestinal factor in Gulf veterans included other symptom types. Correlations among factors raise the question as to whether there is a general illness, even if not unique to Gulf veterans, representing the common pathway underlying the identified factors. Hierarchical factor analysis models may be useful to address this issue. BioMed Central 2004-09-03 /pmc/articles/PMC519030/ /pubmed/15347423 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1478-7954-2-8 Text en Copyright © 2004 Nisenbaum et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0) ), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research
Nisenbaum, Rosane
Ismail, Khalida
Wessely, Simon
Unwin, Catherine
Hull, Lisa
Reeves, William C
Dichotomous factor analysis of symptoms reported by UK and US veterans of the 1991 Gulf War
title Dichotomous factor analysis of symptoms reported by UK and US veterans of the 1991 Gulf War
title_full Dichotomous factor analysis of symptoms reported by UK and US veterans of the 1991 Gulf War
title_fullStr Dichotomous factor analysis of symptoms reported by UK and US veterans of the 1991 Gulf War
title_full_unstemmed Dichotomous factor analysis of symptoms reported by UK and US veterans of the 1991 Gulf War
title_short Dichotomous factor analysis of symptoms reported by UK and US veterans of the 1991 Gulf War
title_sort dichotomous factor analysis of symptoms reported by uk and us veterans of the 1991 gulf war
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC519030/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/15347423
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1478-7954-2-8
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