Autoimmune Disease and VA Disability

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Leah Bucholz

Leah Bucholz, PA-C, is a Board-Certified Physician Assistant, U.S. Army combat veteran, and nationally recognized medical expert in veterans’ disability claims. A former VA Compensation & Pension examiner, she founded Prestige Veteran Medical Consulting to provide independent, regulation-based medical opinions (“nexus” letters) grounded in the VA’s Schedule for Rating Disabilities (38 CFR). Leah’s work is frequently cited in favorable Board of Veterans’ Appeals decisions, and her content draws directly from authoritative sources such as VA.gov, the eCFR, and the Federal Register.
Autoimmune Disease and VA Disability

At Prestige Veteran Medical Consulting, our blogs are written and reviewed by licensed medical professionals or military veterans with direct experience in the VA claims process. Our team has served as healthcare providers, combat veterans, and former VA examiners — giving us unique insight into both the medical and regulatory side of benefits. Every article is designed to provide accurate, trustworthy, and practical guidance so that veterans and their families can make informed decisions with confidence.

Autoimmune diseases affect thousands of veterans, often creating long term health challenges that interfere with work, daily activities, and overall quality of life. Conditions such as lupus, rheumatoid arthritis, multiple sclerosis, thyroid disorders, and inflammatory bowel diseases can develop during or after military service, sometimes linked to environmental exposures, infections, or intense physical and emotional stress.

Understanding how autoimmune diseases are evaluated for VA disability, how they may be connected to military service, and what medical research says about their causes is essential for veterans who are seeking benefits. Leah provides a clear, comprehensive overview of autoimmune disease and VA disability claims, including rating systems, service connection pathways, and the importance of medical evidence.

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Understanding Autoimmune Diseases

Autoimmune diseases occur when the immune system mistakenly attacks healthy cells, tissues, or organs. Instead of protecting the body from infections and harmful invaders, the immune system begins to target normal body structures, causing chronic inflammation and damage.

There are more than 80 recognized autoimmune disorders. Some of the most common conditions affecting veterans include:

Rheumatoid Arthritis

A chronic inflammatory disease that primarily affects joints, causing pain, stiffness, swelling, and reduced mobility. In severe cases it may damage organs and limit physical function.

Systemic Lupus Erythematosus

Often called lupus, this condition can affect multiple organs including skin, joints, kidneys, and the nervous system. Symptoms often include fatigue, joint pain, rashes, and organ complications.

Multiple Sclerosis

Multiple sclerosis affects the central nervous system, disrupting communication between the brain and body. It can lead to muscle weakness, vision problems, balance issues, and fatigue.

Autoimmune Thyroid Disorders

Conditions such as Hashimoto’s thyroiditis and Graves disease affect thyroid function, impacting metabolism, energy levels, heart rate, and body temperature regulation.

Psoriasis and Psoriatic Arthritis

These conditions cause inflammation of the skin and joints. Veterans may experience painful plaques, swelling, stiffness, and limited movement.

Inflammatory Bowel Diseases

Crohn’s disease and ulcerative colitis cause chronic inflammation of the digestive tract, leading to abdominal pain, diarrhea, fatigue, and nutritional deficiencies.

Many veterans report that symptoms began during or shortly after service. Environmental exposures, prolonged infections, and sustained stress during deployments are often discussed in medical research as possible contributing factors.

How the VA Rates Autoimmune Diseases

The VA does not use a single rating code for autoimmune diseases because each condition affects different body systems. Instead, ratings are assigned based on the organ system primarily impacted and the severity of symptoms.

Rheumatoid Arthritis Ratings

Rheumatoid arthritis may be rated up to 100 percent depending on symptom frequency, joint involvement, and the level of functional impairment.

Lupus Ratings

Lupus may receive a minimum rating of 10 percent if continuous medication is required. Ratings can increase significantly depending on organ involvement and symptom severity.

Multiple Sclerosis Ratings

Multiple sclerosis is typically rated as its own condition, and additional ratings may be assigned for complications such as muscle weakness, paralysis, or vision impairment.

Autoimmune Thyroid Conditions

Hashimoto’s thyroiditis and Graves disease are rated within the endocrine system. Ratings depend on metabolic impact, heart rate abnormalities, fatigue, and related symptoms.

Regardless of the condition, strong medical evidence is critical. Veterans should ensure their records include detailed symptom descriptions, laboratory results, imaging studies, treatment history, and documentation showing how the disease affects daily functioning.

Service Connection Pathways for Autoimmune Diseases

To receive VA disability benefits, veterans must demonstrate that their autoimmune condition is connected to military service. Several service connection pathways may apply depending on individual circumstances.

Direct Service Connection

Direct service connection applies when the autoimmune disease began during service or was caused by a service related event or exposure.

Common triggers discussed in claims include:

Environmental exposures such as burn pits or chemical agents
Exposure to solvents, pesticides, or heavy metals
Chronic infections acquired during deployment
Prolonged physical or emotional stress

Even if a formal diagnosis occurred years later, early symptoms documented in service treatment records such as joint pain, rashes, unexplained fatigue, or inflammation can help establish a direct link.

Presumptive Service Connection

Some autoimmune or inflammatory conditions qualify for presumptive service connection for specific groups of veterans.

Multiple sclerosis may be presumptively connected if it develops to a compensable degree within seven years of discharge. Veterans exposed to Gulf War environmental hazards may also qualify for presumptive service connection related to chronic multi system illnesses that include autoimmune type symptoms.

Presumptive rules reduce the burden of proving exact causation as long as service and timing criteria are met.

Secondary Service Connection

Autoimmune diseases may develop or worsen because of another service connected condition.

Examples include:

Chronic stress or PTSD contributing to immune system dysfunction
Long term medication use leading to secondary immune disorders
Endocrine or inflammatory conditions emerging due to an existing service connected illness

To establish secondary service connection, a medical opinion must clearly explain how the primary service connected condition caused or aggravated the autoimmune disease.

Aggravation of a Pre Existing Condition

If a veteran entered service with a mild autoimmune condition that worsened due to military duties, physical demands, or exposures, they may qualify under aggravation.

Evidence must show that military service accelerated disease progression or increased severity beyond the expected natural course.

The Importance of Medical Evidence

Successful VA disability claims rely heavily on strong medical documentation. Veterans should focus on building a comprehensive evidence file that includes:

Complete medical history and treatment records
Detailed symptom descriptions and functional limitations
Diagnostic test results such as blood work or imaging
Statements from healthcare providers explaining causation or aggravation
Personal statements describing daily impact

Consistent medical treatment and follow up appointments help demonstrate the ongoing nature and severity of autoimmune diseases.

Working With Accredited Professionals

Navigating a VA disability claim involving autoimmune diseases can be complex. Accredited attorneys, claims agents, and veteran service officers understand the requirements and can help veterans prepare strong claims.

Accredited representatives can assist with:

Gathering and organizing evidence
Interpreting complex medical records
Ensuring documentation meets VA standards
Preparing appeals if necessary

Veterans can locate accredited representatives through official VA databases or trusted organizations such as the American Legion, Disabled American Veterans, Veterans of Foreign Wars, or local veteran service offices.

Some veterans also work with medical professionals who specialize in record reviews and medical opinions. While medical experts can provide evidence and analysis, legal professionals ensure claims meet procedural requirements.

Final Thoughts

Autoimmune diseases present unique challenges for veterans seeking VA disability benefits. Because these conditions affect multiple body systems and vary significantly in severity, each claim requires careful documentation, strong medical evidence, and a clear explanation of how military service contributed to the disease.

Understanding the VA rating process, the different service connection pathways, and the role of medical research can help veterans build stronger claims. Whether pursuing direct service connection, presumptive benefits, secondary service connection, or aggravation claims, veterans should focus on detailed documentation and professional guidance when needed.

With proper preparation and support, many veterans living with autoimmune diseases can successfully obtain the benefits and recognition they deserve for service related health conditions.

Also Read: What Really Happens at a BVA Hearing (Veterans Appeals Explained Step-by-Step)

At Prestige Veteran Medical Consulting, a veteran-owned company, we specialize in Independent Medical Opinions (IMOs) known as Nexus letters.

Our purpose is to empower YOU, the veteran, to take charge of your medical evidence and provide you with valuable educational tools and research to guide you on your journey.

Understanding the unique challenges veterans face, our commitment lies in delivering exceptional service and support.

Leveraging an extensive network of licensed independent medical professionals, all well-versed in the medical professional aspects of the VA claims process, we review the necessary medical evidence to incorporate in our reports related to your VA Disability Claim.

Prestige Veteran Medical Consulting is not a law firm, accredited claims agent, or affiliated with the Veterans Administration or Veterans Services Organizations. However, we are happy to discuss your case with your accredited VA legal professional.

Picture of Alan Bucholz, PA-C

Alan Bucholz, PA-C

Board-Certified Physician Assistant | U.S. Army Combat Veteran | Co-founder & CFO, Prestige Veteran Medical Consulting

This article was medically reviewed and fact checked by Alan Bucholz, PA-C, a board-certified Physician Assistant and retired U.S. Army combat veteran with experience in emergency medicine and two combat deployments (Iraq & Afghanistan). As Co-founder of Prestige Veteran Medical Consulting, Alan provides evidence-based medical opinions to support veterans’ VA disability claims with accuracy, compliance, and ethics.

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Alan Bucholz

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​“It is essential to remember that there is no greater honor than caring for service members on the battlefield. Continuing to care for Veterans after separation is an opportunity that I have been afforded to extend that care in this new battlefield related to service-incurred disabilities.”

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