Long nodule MEB

FalconPunched86

Member
Registered Member
hey all, I’ve lurked here for a bit and haven’t seen too many answers about lung nodules. I’m 17 yrs in the Air national guard (E7), and about a year ago, a chest x-ray revealed a few small masses in my lungs. Immediately sent for CT/PET scans. Turns out, I have multiple spiculated nodules across both lobes, largest being in the middle at 13mm.

I was removed from my section (acft maintenance) by medical due to concerns about being further exposed to aircraft hazards. Such as.. hexavalent chromium. Since then, I’ve had multiple follow ups, all showing the nodules haven’t shrunk, or lessened. Lowered PFT results (Fev/fvc 71%) In May 2025, I was informed I was being med boarded. My commanders impact statement agreed with the med group of do not retain, the docs wrote I was non deployable, and could not return to my career field due to over exposure.

Since then, I’ve been cleared to at least PT. However have been sitting in an office working with the UDM for our group.

I haven’t heard anything at all since this started. I’m aware it takes time, but just curious what others think may happen (fit or unfit). I’m ready to board, I’ve been doing my leg work getting diagnosis for other issues, all documented. Just trying to calm my thoughts about the potential outcome. Most everyone has said I’ll be unfit, but it’s all a guessing game.
 
From what you’ve described, it sounds like your case is already pretty far along in the process, even if it doesn’t feel like it. The waiting part is honestly one of the hardest parts of MEB.

When nodules aren’t resolving and there’s already impact on your deployability and career field, that usually weighs heavily in the final decision. The fact that you’ve been removed from your section and have documented exposure concerns also matters more than people think.

No one can say for sure how it’ll go, but cases like this often come down to whether the condition is considered stable enough for continued service vs long-term risk.

You’re doing the right thing by getting everything documented. That’s usually what makes the biggest difference when the board reviews everything.
 
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