The Mercury News

Experts perplexed by diplomats’ problems

- By The Associated Press

MIAMI >> American diplomats affected by mysterious health incidents in Cuba showed damage in the inner ear shortly after they complained of weird noises and sensations, according to their earliest medical exams, publicized Wednesday.

The detailed findings were published in a medical journal nearly two years after what the U.S. calls “health attacks” began, and they shed no new light on a possible culprit.

“What caused it, who did it, why it was done; we don't know any of those things,” said Dr. Michael Hoffer of the University of Miami Miller School of Medicine, who led the exams.

The U.S. said since late 2016, 26 people associated with the embassy in Havana suffered problems that include dizziness, ear pain and ringing and cognitive problems such as difficulty thinking; a health mystery that has damaged U.S.Cuba relations.

The Miami researcher­s examined 25 of those people who reported hearing a piercing noise or experienci­ng a sensation of pressure before their symptoms began.

The patients failed a variety of tests that detect inner-ear problems associated with balance, what's called the vestibular system; although there were no pre-symptom medical records to compare.

Testing of 10 other people who were in the same building at the time of the incidents found they were fine, Hoffer reported in the journal Laryngosco­pe Investigat­ive Otolaryngo­logy.

Hoffer also traveled to Cuba to check 100 other Americans stationed there, who also turned out to be healthy.

Those inner-ear balance problems have been central to the government's ongoing health investigat­ion. Earlier this year, a team of doctors at the University of Pennsylvan­ia who also examined many of these patients, but months later, reported they suffered a concussion-like brain injury, despite no blow to the head.

In a brief interview with The Associated Press, Hoffer said the two studies aren't contradict­ory, but they have different findings because patients were tested at different times and in different ways.

“Is the brain affected from the ear? Is the brain affected directly? We don't know yet,” Hoffer said at Wednesday's news conference.

The U.S. has not said what caused the incidents, although initial speculatio­n centered on some type of sonic attack.

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