A FORMER soldier left with a haemophilia-like condition after receiving a double dose of Gulf War vaccinations plans to sue the Ministry of Defence.
Martin Topp claims the blunder destroyed his health, fitness and a potentially brilliant military career with the Royal Engineers.
Now Martin, 29, is working as a lecturer in engineering at Blackburn College and receives a fraction of the service pension a glittering career would have commanded.
He said: "I am very bitter.They have destroyed everything for me."
Martin, of Leyland, was sent to the Gulf towards the end of the conflict having already been given the first of a two-stage set of inoculations for diseases like plague, cholera and anthrax. When he arrived, medics forced him to repeat both stages of the treatment - now also blamed for Gulf War Syndrome - because they did not have his medical records.
He claims a high-ranking army doctor later told him there was a "strong possibility" that the double dosage was responsible for causing his illness, and has obtained copies of his medical records proving what happened.
He said: "My condition was diagnosed by accident when I was later serving in Northern Ireland.
"I was treated by civilians at Belfast City Hospital for my blood disorder. They also removed my spleen.
"Afterwards, I returned to Aldershot for treatment and assessment.
"They denied it had been anything to do with the Gulf War or my vaccinations. I was told I was cured."
The rare condition - drug-induced thrombocytopenia - causes almost identical problems to the blood disease haemophilia after the sufferer is infected with even a minor ailment.
Mr Topp added: "I have to take penicillin for the rest of my life. "My immune system attacks the virus and then starts attacking my body.
"If I get a common cold, I come out in severe bruising.
"My three-year-old son recently had chicken pox and despite the fact that I have already had it, it affected me."
Martin, son of a soldier with 18 years' service, joined at the Princess Marina Military College aged 16 in 1985 and was named best recruit from the 180 intake.
After three-and-a-half years, he was a class one corporal and believes he would have attained at least warrant officer rank if his prospects had not been stalled by his health.
He added: "I was physically fit and ran four or five miles a day. After taking steroids I ballooned to 13 stone and was unable to exercise."
Martin was medically discharged in August last year with a payment of £11,500 and a monthly pension of £230.
A higher rank would have commanded a pension of £400 to 500 and much higher pay off.
Mr Topp will travel to London for a report from a top doctor before deciding on how to mount his case.
His solicitor, Geraldine McCool of Manchester law firm Leigh, Day and Co, said: "I have a vast number of Gulf War clients.
"Martin is very unusual in that he was given two sets of vaccinations and because of the condition he now has."
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