((Excerpt))
“The two-month period was used to simulate the late-onset effect of sarin/nerve agents in Gulf War veterans. There are suggestions that Gulf War illness, in which symptoms are long-lasting, may be related to exposure to low-dose chemical warfare agents,” Mariana Morris, of the Boonshoft School of Medicine at Wright State University in Dayton, Ohio, said in a news release from the American Heart Association.

Turning injury into impact
From dance to data, Wright State students showcase research at annual celebration
A lifetime of curiosity
Wright State students raise more than $59,000 for Dayton Children’s Hospital at Raiderthon
Wright State retains Carnegie Research 2 classification, reinforcing national research impact