The New Zealand Herald

Scans add to Cuba mystery

Studies of diplomats’ brains raise more questions after claims of sonic attacks

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ALindsey Tanner

dvanced brain scans found perplexing difference­s in US diplomats who say they developed concussion-like symptoms after working in Cuba, a finding that only heightens the mystery of what may have happened to them, a new study says.

Extensive imaging tests showed the workers had less white matter than a comparison group of healthy people and other structural difference­s, researcher­s said.

While they had expected the cerebellum, near the brain stem, to be affected given the workers’ reported symptoms — balance problems, sleep and thinking difficulti­es, headaches and other complaints — they found unique patterns in tissue connecting brain regions.

Ragini Verma, a University of Pennsylvan­ia brain imaging specialist and the lead author, said the patterns were unlike anything she’s seen from brain diseases or injuries.

“It is pretty strange. It’s a true medical mystery,” Verma said.

Co-author Dr Randel Swanson, a Penn specialist in brain injury rehabilita­tion, said “there’s no question that something happened”, but imaging tests can’t determine what it was.

An outside expert, University of Edinburgh neurologis­t Jon Stone, said the study doesn’t confirm that any brain injury occurred nor that the brain difference­s resulted from the strange experience­s the diplomats said happened in Cuba.

Cuba has denied any kind of attack, which has strained relations with the United States.

“The article published today doesn’t change the situation,” said Johana Tablada, Cuba’s deputy head of US affairs.

The results were published this week in the Journal of the American Medical Associatio­n. A journal editorial says the study may improve understand­ing of the reported symptoms, but that the relevance of the brain difference­s is uncertain.

Between late 2016 and May 2018, several US and Canadian diplomats in Havana complained of health problems from an unknown cause. One US count put the number of American personnel affected at 26.

Some reported hearing highpitche­d sounds while at home or staying in hotels, leading to an early theory of a sonic attack.

An interim FBI report found no evidence that sound waves could have caused the damage.

Dozens of US diplomats, family members and other workers sought exams. The new study reports on 40 of them tested at the University of Pennsylvan­ia. A group analysis of results from advanced MRI scans found brain difference­s in the diplomat group compared with 48 healthy people with similar ages and ethnic background.

 ?? Photo / AP ?? The scans by the American Medical Associatio­n shows the amount of difference­s between patients, diplomats and a control group.
Photo / AP The scans by the American Medical Associatio­n shows the amount of difference­s between patients, diplomats and a control group.

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