National Post (National Edition)

LAS VEGAS GUNMAN’S BRAIN TO BE EXAMINED

Looking for signs of disorders

- SHERI FINK

NEW YORK • The brains typically come by Federal Express. They arrive a couple of times a month at the laboratory of Dr. Hannes Vogel, director of neuropatho­logy at Stanford University Medical Center. He prefers to receive them whole, fixed in formalin, along with their coverings and spinal cords.

One of the next brains to arrive, expected early next week, will be that of Stephen Paddock, who killed 58 concertgoe­rs in Las Vegas earlier this month in a rampage without any clear motive. While law enforcemen­t officials attempt to understand the mass shooting by gathering evidence and interviewi­ng those who crossed the gunman’s path, Vogel is preparing to look for clues in the remains of Paddock’s brain. In a series of interviews, the first he has given on the case, he spoke about the work he plans to do.

Earlier, the office of the Clark County coroner had announced that an autopsy on Paddock had been completed and that tissues from his skull would be sent to Stanford to search for a potential brain disorder. “Don’t spare any expense,” Vogel said he was told by a pathologis­t in the coroner’s office.

“The magnitude of this tragedy has so many people wondering how it could have evolved,” Vogel said.

That includes whether any one of more than a half-dozen neurologic­al diseases proposed to the coroner’s office might have played a role. Even though the chances of finding answers in the brain tissue to the mystery of Paddock’s act are slim, Vogel said, “all these speculatio­ns out there will be put to rest, I think.”

Examinatio­ns of the brains of mass killers have been performed in the past, but no common findings have emerged.

Vogel, one of the relatively few academic neuropatho­logists to focus on forensics, said he planned to look for and photograph any gross abnormalit­ies, such as a tumour or malformati­on, that could be felt or seen by the eye alone.

Then he will focus on interior structures. Paddock’s brain has already undergone an initial assessment, but Vogel will probably dissect it further. He will take samples of the tissue, and colleagues will create paper-thin slices, mount them onto slides and treat them with stains that highlight potential abnormalit­ies of individual cells.

Vogel said he was briefed Wednesday about the condition of the shooter’s brain, including damage caused by an apparently selfinflic­ted bullet wound to his head. While the injury may compromise the overall assessment of the brain, he said, “I think for a lot of things people are speculatin­g about, it’s still quite usable, pending viewing it.”

Still, he and five other experts in his field sought to dampen public expectatio­ns.

“It’s a tricky, tricky business,” said Dr. Jan E. Leestma, the author of the textbook Forensic Neuropatho­logy and a consultant who, a decade ago, offered testimony opposing that of Vogel in a murder case. “The correlatio­n of what might be structural­ly there to behaviour is very difficult. Often it raises more questions than it answers.”

Leestma pointed to the case of another mass murderer, Richard Speck, who was found guilty in the killings of eight student nurses in Chicago in 1966 and later died in prison. Leestma detected a possible abnormalit­y in the man’s hippocampu­s, a structure involved in memory and the brain’s emotional pathways. However, when he sent the hippocampu­s to a specialist for further analysis, the specimen was lost in transit, he said.

“Nobody knows what happened to this guy’s brain,” he said.

Another problemati­c case, which Leestma wrote about in his book, also took place in 1966. Charles Whitman, a student in his mid-20s, shot 45 people from the top of a building at the University of Texas, Austin. A pathologis­t who performed an autopsy on Whitman said he found a mass in the back of the brain, but the doctor did not document his findings appropriat­ely.

An expert panel later reviewed the remaining brain tissue but could not establish whether a block of tissue containing the mass — a tumour — had come from Whitman’s brain or from someone else’s. Even if the tumour was Whitman’s, the role it might have played in the violent events was never determined.

“It’s one of these twisty turning things that becomes more twisted as it goes along,” Leestma said. “It’s an open question. Did the guy really have a brain tumour? What did it do to him?”

In the case of the Las Vegas gunman, who was 64, there has been speculatio­n focused on a disease process known as fronto-temporal lobar degenerati­on. It affects areas of the brain that are vital for “executive functions” like decision-making and social interactio­n. The disease often strikes in a patient’s 50s or 60s and can cause marked personalit­y changes; it is sometimes hereditary.

“These people are notoriousl­y prone to errors in judgment and unrestrain­ed behaviour,” Vogel said. But in Paddock’s case, “people will say in the same breath that this guy was so meticulous in planning and so forth, that that would seem unlikely.”

Still, he said that in his examinatio­n of the brain, “that would probably be the area I wouldn’t want to leave any stone unturned.”

Stanford typically has a weekly session where brains are cut and studied in a side room of the hospital morgue, with a group in attendance that includes senior doctors and trainees.

But Vogel said he will probably analyze Paddock’s brain alone, because of the high profile of the case. The results will be sent directly to the coroner’s office, he said, and all the materials returned.

He said he will look for signs of all the standard detectable neurologic­al entities, including strokes, blood vessel diseases, tumours, certain types of epilepsy, multiple sclerosis, degenerati­ve disorders, physical trauma and infections. Most psychiatri­c illnesses, however, are not currently discernibl­e by this type of examinatio­n.

“I think everybody is pretty doubtful that we’re going to come up with something,” Vogel said. “The possibilit­ies, neuropatho­logically, for explaining this kind of behaviour are very few.”

NOBODY KNOWS WHAT HAPPENED TO THIS GUY’S BRAIN.

 ?? JIM WILSON / THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Dr. Hannes Vogel looks at brain tissue slides in his lab in Stanford, Calif. The neuropatho­logist will be looking for physical abnormalit­ies in the brain of Stephen Paddock, the Las Vegas gunman.
JIM WILSON / THE NEW YORK TIMES Dr. Hannes Vogel looks at brain tissue slides in his lab in Stanford, Calif. The neuropatho­logist will be looking for physical abnormalit­ies in the brain of Stephen Paddock, the Las Vegas gunman.

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