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Free Viability Check →Irritable bowel syndrome is one of the most prevalent chronic conditions among Gulf War veterans, and it's one of the few digestive disorders for which VA has created a formal presumptive pathway. If you deployed to Southwest Asia and you have IBS, you may not need a nexus letter at all.
Under 38 CFR 3.317, VA must service-connect what it calls "medically unexplained chronic multisymptom illnesses" (MUCMIs) in veterans who served in the Southwest Asia theater of operations after August 2, 1990. Irritable bowel syndrome is explicitly listed as a qualifying MUCMI.
The critical elements are:
That last element, "no other adequate cause," is one VA sometimes uses to deny claims. If you have IBS diagnosed by a gastroenterologist and no clear alternative explanation (such as inflammatory bowel disease), VA should apply the presumptive.
The phrase "medically unexplained" does not mean your physician is baffled. It means the condition does not have a single, definitive pathophysiological cause that explains all the symptoms. IBS by definition falls into this category: it is a functional disorder of gut-brain interaction, diagnosed clinically without a structural or biochemical cause.
VA cannot deny your IBS claim simply because you received a formal diagnosis. A formal IBS diagnosis from a licensed physician or gastroenterologist using recognized diagnostic criteria (Rome IV criteria, for example) is exactly what 38 CFR 3.317 contemplates.
The Southwest Asia theater under 3.317 includes:
If you deployed to any of these locations during the covered period, you qualify for presumptive consideration.
The documentation for a 3.317 IBS claim is simpler than for a nexus-based claim:
You do not need a nexus letter proving IBS was caused by service. The presumption does that work for you.
VA denials under 3.317 often come on one of three grounds:
"No qualifying service." Check your DD-214 and service records carefully. Deployments to theater aren't always clearly documented on the DD-214 itself. Unit records, deployment orders, and buddy statements can fill the gap.
"Condition is not chronic." A single clinic visit noting IBS is not enough. You need a pattern of documented symptoms over at least six months. If your medical records are thin, gather all available records including private records, VA records, and Reserve or Guard service records.
"Adequate cause identified." This denial reason requires VA to identify a specific, documented alternate explanation. If they point to dietary factors or a single episode of gastroenteritis as the "adequate cause," that is legally insufficient to rebut the presumptive. An independent medical opinion can address this directly.
Many Gulf War veterans have both IBS and PTSD. In that situation, you may have both a 3.317 presumptive claim and a secondary service connection claim under 38 CFR 3.310. The two theories are not mutually exclusive. Filing the stronger one (typically the presumptive) does not prevent you from arguing the secondary theory in the alternative.
See IBS secondary to PTSD: the evidence for a detailed discussion of the secondary claim pathway.
VA rates IBS under Diagnostic Code 7319. The three rating levels are:
The difference between 10% and 30% in compensation is meaningful. More importantly, even a 10% IBS rating adds to your combined disability and can unlock secondary claims for conditions caused or worsened by IBS (such as malnutrition, anemia from poor absorption, or functional impairment affecting employment). Don't assume a low rating makes the claim not worth pursuing.
Gulf War veterans with IBS have one of the clearest presumptive pathways in VA claims law. If your claim has been denied or you haven't filed yet, Flat Rate Nexus offers physician-signed independent medical opinions and free educational resources at flatratenexus.com, including a nexus letter grader and C&P exam preparation guide.
Thinking about your own claim? Every nexus letter we write goes through a full physician record review, cites peer-reviewed research, and is built around the actual evidence in your case.
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