Nexus Letters for VA Disability Claims

Nexus Letters for VA Disability Claims MD physicians providing evidence-based independent medical opinions for VA disability claims.

Specialized training in Internal Medicine, Addiction Medicine, and Occupational & Environmental Medicine, with expertise in toxic exposures.

If you have service-connected PTSD and have struggled with alcohol, this may be relevant for your VA claim.Alcohol Use D...
06/05/2026

If you have service-connected PTSD and have struggled with alcohol, this may be relevant for your VA claim.

Alcohol Use Disorder can be service-connected secondarily to PTSD under 38 C.F.R. § 3.310. The VA recognizes the medical link between trauma and self-medication. But they need to see it documented properly.

A physician-authored nexus letter is the evidence that bridges the gap between your diagnosis and your rating.

Read our full physician-authored guide: https://nexuslettermd.com/blog/f/alcohol-use-disorder-as-a-secondary-service-connection-to-ptsd

Many Veterans living with PTSD find themselves reaching for alcohol to quiet the flashbacks, silence the nightmares, or simply get through another night. What most of them don't realize is that the VA recognizes this rel...

Many veterans and military families stationed at Camp Lejeune were unknowingly exposed to contaminated drinking water fo...
06/04/2026

Many veterans and military families stationed at Camp Lejeune were unknowingly exposed to contaminated drinking water for years.

Today, conditions such as bladder cancer, kidney cancer, leukemia, Parkinson's disease, and other illnesses continue to raise important questions about toxic exposure and long-term health effects.

While some conditions may qualify for VA presumptive service connection, many claims still require careful review of exposure history, medical records, latency periods, and competing risk factors.

Our newest physician-written article explains:
✓ What contaminants were present at Camp Lejeune
✓ Conditions commonly evaluated in toxic exposure claims
✓ The difference between VA claims and Camp Lejeune Justice Act lawsuits
✓ Why some claims are denied
✓ What makes a medically sound nexus opinion

Read the full article here: https://nexuslettermd.com/blog/f/camp-lejeune-toxic-water-exposure

This Memorial Day, we honor and remember those who gave their lives in service to our country.At David Medical Services,...
05/25/2026

This Memorial Day, we honor and remember those who gave their lives in service to our country.

At David Medical Services, it is a privilege to serve Veterans and their families every day.

We remember those who never made it home — and the families and friends who carry that sacrifice forward.

Many Gulf War Veterans live with chronic symptoms that don’t fit neatly into a single diagnosis — fatigue, chronic pain,...
05/22/2026

Many Gulf War Veterans live with chronic symptoms that don’t fit neatly into a single diagnosis — fatigue, chronic pain, headaches, IBS, sleep problems, brain fog, and more.

These conditions are often recognized by the VA as medically unexplained chronic multisymptom illness (MUCMI), but strong medical documentation still matters.

A well-supported nexus letter can help explain:
• how Gulf War service relates to current symptoms
• why symptoms may not fit a traditional diagnosis
• the medical literature supporting Gulf War Illness claims
• functional impact on daily life

Read the latest article on our blog:

“Gulf War Illness: Proving Chronic Multisymptom Illness” https://nexuslettermd.com/blog/f/gulf-war-illness-proving-chronic-multisymptom-illness

Many Veterans think Agent Orange claims fall into only two categories:Either the condition is presumptive and the claim ...
05/19/2026

Many Veterans think Agent Orange claims fall into only two categories:

Either the condition is presumptive and the claim should be easy, or it is not presumptive and the case is over.

It is often more nuanced than that.

Some claims are straightforward. Others depend on the diagnosis, the service history, the prior VA decision, and whether the records support the nexus being presented.

That is why the question to ask is not always just, “Is it on the list?”
As with all VA claims, the real question is, “Do my records support the claim?”

If you are dealing with an Agent Orange-related claim, here’s a new article explaining when the presumption helps and when a closer medical review may still matter.

https://nexuslettermd.com/blog/f/agent-orange-claims-presumptive-vs-nexus

The PACT Act was a massive win. But "presumptive" doesn't mean automatic.It just means the VA won't argue about *why* yo...
05/12/2026

The PACT Act was a massive win. But "presumptive" doesn't mean automatic.

It just means the VA won't argue about *why* you're sick. But they'll still argue about how much. And your secondary conditions? Not presumptive at all.

That's where a nexus letter from a physician specializing in occupational & environmental medicine earns its place. Swipe to see exactly what it covers — and what your claim might be missing.

Learn more: https://nexuslettermd.com/blog/f/pact-act-presumptive-conditions-value-of-a-nexus-letter

One of the most common winning VA claims for sleep apnea isn’t what most Veterans think.It’s not just about weight.It’s ...
05/02/2026

One of the most common winning VA claims for sleep apnea isn’t what most Veterans think.

It’s not just about weight.
It’s not just about anatomy.

It’s often secondary to PTSD.

As a physician reviewing these cases, I see this pattern repeatedly: Veterans with service-connected PTSD, chronic sleep disruption, diagnosed sleep apnea, and ongoing fatigue even with CPAP receive a claim denial saying the conditions are “unrelated.”

That argument is inconsistent with what we know medically. PTSD doesn’t just affect mood—it affects:

• Sleep architecture
• Nervous system regulation
• Airway stability during sleep
• Even the ability to tolerate CPAP

When this connection is clearly explained with proper medical reasoning, it becomes one of the most defensible secondary nexus arguments.

Most Veterans don’t lose because their case isn’t valid. They lose because the medical explanation isn’t strong enough.

If you’ve been denied, or you’re considering filing, this is something you may want to read: https://nexuslettermd.com/blog/f/sleep-apnea-secondary-to-ptsd-most-common-winning-nexus-argument

If you’re not sure whether your case is strong, we also offer a physician-led case assessment before you commit to a full nexus letter.

One of the most common questions Veterans ask is, “Do I really need a nexus letter?”The answer is not the same for every...
04/18/2026

One of the most common questions Veterans ask is, “Do I really need a nexus letter?”

The answer is not the same for every case.

Some Veterans can file without one because their records already tell the story clearly enough. Other cases are more medically complex and may benefit from a well-supported medical opinion.

I wrote an article explaining when a nexus letter may help, when it may not be necessary, and how to think through that difference before spending time or money on additional paperwork.

You can read the article here: https://nexuslettermd.com/blog/f/do-i-really-need-a-nexus-letter

The VA conceded your toxic exposure — so why was your claim still denied?This is one of the most confusing parts of mode...
04/16/2026

The VA conceded your toxic exposure — so why was your claim still denied?

This is one of the most confusing parts of modern VA disability claims. A TERA concession is an important favorable finding, but it does not automatically prove that your current condition was caused by that exposure.

For many Veterans, the real issue becomes the medical nexus: Is it at least as likely as not that the claimed condition is related to service?

In our latest article, I explain:

• What a TERA concession means
• What it does not prove
• Why some Veterans are still denied after exposure is conceded, and
• Why “mixed exposures” may matter more than many realize.

If this happened in your case, the missing issue is not exposure. It may be the quality of the medical opinion.

Read more at the link [see pinned comment]

You submitted a nexus letter…and the VA didn’t even mention it in the decision.It’s one of the most frustrating moments ...
04/09/2026

You submitted a nexus letter…and the VA didn’t even mention it in the decision.
It’s one of the most frustrating moments in the claims process — and many veterans assume it means their evidence was ignored.
But in many cases, there’s actually a specific reason this happens. It could be:
• Timing of submission
• Upload issues
• C&P exam weight
• Or how the opinion was written
Understanding this can make a huge difference in what you do next.
Read the article (link in comments).

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