Expanding on their prior research of the incidence of pituitary dysfunction in male post-bTBI veterans, Dr. Taylor and his colleagues looked at 37 male veterans who had been exposed to combat - related blasts. (sciencedaily.com)
We are finding a high incidence of pituitary dysfunction in that group as well. (scientificamerican.com)
In soldiers who survive traumatic brain injury from blast exposure, pituitary dysfunction after their blast injury may be an important, under - recognized, and potentially treatable source of their symptoms, a new study finds. (sciencedaily.com)