Boren's Syndrome
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Boren's Syndrome is a fictitious human disease used as a cover up ONI created to hide the identity of the Spartan-Is.
Public knowledge
Information about this "disease" was spread to the public by the Office of Naval Intelligence following the end of the ORION Project, complete with a list of symptoms. The disease allegedly caused tumors and migraines, and was supposedly caused by exposure to certain types of radiation.
Claims as to the cause of the disease include inhaling the gases released when a Type-51 Carbine magazine is ejected and being exposed to Plasma Grenade radiation, although these causes are either ONI cover-ups or battlefield superstition. In reality, the "disease" was the product of modifications made to ORION project candidates.
Several Insurrectionists claimed to have this condition, hoping to bargain with the UNSC to gain treatment for the condition in trade for some FENRIS Nuclear Warheads they had in stock. However, their status was false, as the bargain was revealed to be a trap set up by Howard Graves in an attempt to capture Spartan-IIs.
Cover-up
Staff Sergeant Avery Johnson's falsified Medical record - to hide his real, classified record - had him as a sufferer of Boren's, in which he was to have contracted the disease on Paris IV, after being in contact with a dangerously high amount of radiation apparently originating from a crate of captured Plasma Grenades.[1]
This false record event (known to ONI as the Paris/BS Spoof) was likely used as a means of avoiding any investigation into his altered DNA and physiology, which would have revealed him as a SPARTAN-I. [2]
Long term effects (falsified)
Untreated or unsuccessfully treated, Boren's can be fatal or debilitating. While some effects, such as migraines, can be managed with medication, the tumors involved in the disease usually, or possibly always, become malignant. Because of this, treating Boren's Syndrome invariably means treating cancer, a process that can be debilitating. The only way to cure Boren's syndrome is an intensive regimen of Chemotherapy lasting for thirty weeks.
According to theory, some combination of the disease's (apparently) multiple pathologies discourages Flood Super Cells. This would explain why Sergeant Avery Johnson could not be infected when he and his squad were ambushed by the Flood on Installation 04, leading Master Chief to his moral dilemma. Dr. Catherine Halsey guesses that there'd be a billion to one chance that Johnson's condition could be reproduced.
Technically, there is no explicit proof that Boren's Syndrome discourages Flood. It may be that the nervous system of someone with the disease simply cannot support Flood. One hypothesis is that an infection form attempting to latch on to a host with Boren's Syndrome would recognize the characteristic neurological disturbances as "irreparable damage," thus rendering the sufferer immune. However, it is highly likely that if this condition did in fact prevent Flood infection the Forerunner would have found it after hundreds of years of research into Flood prevention.
Since it has been confirmed that Boren's Syndrome is simply a cover for the side-effects of the SPARTAN-I augmentations, it is possible that the augmentations keep the Flood from recognizing a potential host because of the disruptive effects of the augmentations. However, this cannot be confirmed or disproved since Johnson was the only SPARTAN-I to come in contact with the Flood and the Flood can choose who to infect.
Trivia
- Despite Sergeant Johnson's supposed immunity to the Flood, it is possible to see him infected through a glitch that allows him to survive the cutscene. Johnson also comments during the infection "Ain't I supposed to be immune to this?" This was revealed by Bungie as an Easter Egg.
- Since Johnson is programmed to revive after being killed, stopping an infection midway will result in momentary death, suddenly changing to a marine infection form and getting up.
List of appearances
- Halo: First Strike (Mentioned only)
- Halo: Ghosts of Onyx (Mentioned only)
- Halo Graphic Novel (First mentioned)
Sources
- ^ Halo: First Strike pages 243-245
- ^ Halo: Graphic Novel - Boren's Syndrome Hoax, page 122