Posted on Jul 3, 2025
Don’t keep that near-miss – or repeated - blast off your medical record
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Have you ever been on a patrol where you took mortar or RPG fire, or maybe an IED-blast – but no shrapnel – and just continued mission like it was another day on the job?
What about time spent at the range or a shoot house with lots of high caliber rounds or other explosives detonating near you?
I did all of the above… and my first thoughts were, “it’s not that big of a deal. I don’t want to see the medics and leave my guys behind.” I never gave a second thought to go get these things noted in my medical record.
Pride and inexperience can be a dangerous thing for “future you.”
It turns out that our brains don’t forget as many things as we seem to [citation: https://rly.pt/ScienceDirect].
I’ve been out of the military for a while now and I deal with sleep and other issues that may have come from these past incidents.
If this sounds similar to your experiences, some other symptoms you may want to look for include unexplained vision, balance, hearing, headaches, memory issues, emotional challenges, or incidents losing your temper with your team, family, or friends.
If you are still actively serving in the military, make sure you raise your concerns to your doctor and mention the concussive events so they are documented in your medical records. If you don’t want to bring it up now because you are not sure if you really have these symptoms and don’t want it to keep you from your next promotion, I get it. Just make sure you have these issues documented the moment you drop your papers to end your military service.
That single piece of documentation – made while you are still serving – will be key for the VA to determine benefits and treatment available to you later in life.
If you, like me, are already out of service, and you didn’t have anything documented and are looking for a path forward, then go talk to your doctor. If your doc is not at the VA, consider getting VA care as their docs see a lot more brain trauma patients than most of their civilian counterparts: https://rly.pt/VAapply.
Also, for many reasons (see my last post here: https://rly.pt/ReactToContact), stay in touch with those who served with you. It can be their eyewitness accounts of things you experienced together that can help you if you don’t have the things I mentioned above documented to get the benefits you have earned.
What about time spent at the range or a shoot house with lots of high caliber rounds or other explosives detonating near you?
I did all of the above… and my first thoughts were, “it’s not that big of a deal. I don’t want to see the medics and leave my guys behind.” I never gave a second thought to go get these things noted in my medical record.
Pride and inexperience can be a dangerous thing for “future you.”
It turns out that our brains don’t forget as many things as we seem to [citation: https://rly.pt/ScienceDirect].
I’ve been out of the military for a while now and I deal with sleep and other issues that may have come from these past incidents.
If this sounds similar to your experiences, some other symptoms you may want to look for include unexplained vision, balance, hearing, headaches, memory issues, emotional challenges, or incidents losing your temper with your team, family, or friends.
If you are still actively serving in the military, make sure you raise your concerns to your doctor and mention the concussive events so they are documented in your medical records. If you don’t want to bring it up now because you are not sure if you really have these symptoms and don’t want it to keep you from your next promotion, I get it. Just make sure you have these issues documented the moment you drop your papers to end your military service.
That single piece of documentation – made while you are still serving – will be key for the VA to determine benefits and treatment available to you later in life.
If you, like me, are already out of service, and you didn’t have anything documented and are looking for a path forward, then go talk to your doctor. If your doc is not at the VA, consider getting VA care as their docs see a lot more brain trauma patients than most of their civilian counterparts: https://rly.pt/VAapply.
Also, for many reasons (see my last post here: https://rly.pt/ReactToContact), stay in touch with those who served with you. It can be their eyewitness accounts of things you experienced together that can help you if you don’t have the things I mentioned above documented to get the benefits you have earned.
Posted 6 mo ago
Responses: 52
Good afternoon SSG Clint Romesha. Excellent post. Thank you for sharing this Brother Clint. :->
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Great points. And if you add in all the concussions received from our frequent combatives training, high contact PT (boxing, football, "no blood, no foul" basketball games to name a few I've enjoyed), and jumps with hard landings to the undocumented blasts and I'd say that any Vet who has at least one of the symptoms you mentioned above should get a presumptive claim approved for a TBI by the VA. It's really part of the job description to get our heads banged around early and often for most military career fields.
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https://support22project.org/, The 22 Project, here is more support for TBI: SPECT Brain Imagery, Hyperbaric Oxygen Therapy (HBOT), and other Supplemental Therapies.
Support 22 Project – Healing The Invisible Wounds of War
Healing The Invisible Wounds of War
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PVT AuggieOne Chandler
Is it expensive for a non full med person to get Hyperbaric treatment. Dakota Myers supports it.
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SFC Jimmy Arocho
Hello Pvt Chandler, you should be having conversations about all concussive concerns with your healthcare provider. The work mentioned above is about clinical research. However, this should not keep you from learning more about the HBOT program. Send doctor Bested ( [login to see] ) an email with your thoughts, feelings, and ideas.
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COL Scott Pacello
Hyperbaric oxygen therapy is excellent therapy. The key thing is have follow up treatments on occasion. This is similar to acupuncture treatments that the VA will provide to you. It also works and I have been going since retiring in 2011.
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Very sage advice! It took me 30+ years to get the VA to admit I had these symptoms!
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Very good advice, I didn't report anything during my military carrier and now 43 years later I'm dealing with neurological issues that could Very easily be tied to near misses but I have no documentation. The VA Hospital in Albuquerque has walked away from trying to treat me for my symptoms because of no documentation.
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Funny how you think you are one way but you are not. I read this and the first thing that popped into my mind was the squib round that blew my M16 up in my hands decades ago. Yeah, lottsa other stuff sucked, but funny how that was the one that one jumped out at me reading this. Hadn't given it a minutes thought in decades, and there it was. Thank you for sharing. You gave me something to think about.
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When I joined the Marines I had had a concussion playing high school football and one playing junior college football.
Received a concussion from a motor round and head hitting a tree in Vietnam.
Have constant head pressure, frequent dizzy spells, sleep apnea
Handwriting affected and VA refuses to recognize TBI.
When I went to VA first time I was told I had never been in Military. Had to write my Senator to get recognized.
Received a concussion from a motor round and head hitting a tree in Vietnam.
Have constant head pressure, frequent dizzy spells, sleep apnea
Handwriting affected and VA refuses to recognize TBI.
When I went to VA first time I was told I had never been in Military. Had to write my Senator to get recognized.
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Sgt (Join to see)
Sgt William R Henson When I first contacted the VA, I was told that they did not treat Vietnam Veterans. Have you worked with a Veteran Service Officer? I was not getting anywhere on my own. I had VFW and VVA VSOs that helped me with my claims.
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Sgt William R Henson
Sgt (Join to see)
Thanks. VA here have been of no help. I also have cancer my Dr said was probably caused by agent orange exposure but VA denied my claim. Contacted an American Legion member who helps Vets and he told me since Marines in Northern Icore wore long street shirts I probably don’t qualify.
Thanks. VA here have been of no help. I also have cancer my Dr said was probably caused by agent orange exposure but VA denied my claim. Contacted an American Legion member who helps Vets and he told me since Marines in Northern Icore wore long street shirts I probably don’t qualify.
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SFC (Join to see)
Sgt (Join to see) - ...not to forget the DAV- they litarally guided me through and handled everything w/ the VA.
-Ed
-Ed
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