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138 vetted Board decisions in 2006
The Board denied the veteran's claim of service connection for chronic vestibular dysfunction, including Mônière's disease, finding no causal relationship to his military service.
The Board has denied the veteran's claim for an earlier effective date for the grant of service connection for Meniere's disease with endolymphatic hydrops, bilateral defective hearing, and tinnitus. The appeal is based on new evidence submitted after a final decision denying the claim.
The case is REMANDED for the following actions: (1) Request the veteran to report the entire period since his retirement from service during which he has received VA medical treatment and the location of that treatment, and also any other medical treatment he has received since military retirement for any of the conditions for which he seeks service connection. (2) Schedule the veteran for VA examination to document his current hearing acuity and for the examiner to provide an opinion of the time of onset of hearing impairment and whether it is less than, equal to, or greater than 50 percent probable that current hearing impairment results from acoustic trauma in service or any other incident of service. (3) If and only if additional medical records are obtained, consider whether the veteran is entitled to additional VA examinations as provided in 38 C.F.R. § 3.159(c)(4), and schedule any indicated examinations.
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The Board denied the veteran's claims of entitlement to service connection for residuals, status post epidural anesthetic (claimed as a neuro vestibular disturbance secondary to spinal tap), and granted service connection for interstitial cystitis with a 20% evaluation effective July 10, 2001. The veteran's migraine headaches were rated at 10%, and her bacterial vaginitis was rated at 10%. The Board denied the remaining claims.