Toronto Star

U.S. diplomats in Cuba report concussion­s

Symptoms in the absence of blows to the head perplex medical experts in new study

- GINA KOLATA

A group of U.S. diplomats stationed in Havana appear to have symptoms of concussion without ever having received blows to their heads, medical experts have found.

The diplomats originally were said to have been victims of a “sonic attack,” a possibilit­y that the FBI reportedly ruled out in January.

The experts’ report, published late Wednesday in the journal JAMA, does not solve the mystery, instead raising even more questions about what could have caused the brain injuries.

The incidents occurred in 2016, when 18 of the 21 affected diplomats reported they heard strange sounds in their homes or hotel rooms. The noises were loud and sounded like buzzing or grinding metal, or piercing squeals or humming, the diplomats recalled. Many said they felt increased air pressure, as if they were riding in a car with the windows rolled partway down. Three diplomats said they felt a vibration.

All but one reported immediate symptoms: headache, pain in one ear, loss of hearing. Days or weeks later, other symptoms emerged, including memory problems, an inability to concentrat­e, mood problems, headaches and fatigue.

The State Department asked researcher­s at the University of Pennsylvan­ia to investigat­e. Their report confirmed neurologic­al problems in the diplomats, including signs of what appear to be concussion­s.

“The study was conducted by the top concussion research team in the world utilizing state-of-the-art methods,” said C. Edward Dixon, a professor of neurologic­al surgery at the University of Pittsburgh, who was not involved in the research. The findings suggest “a significan­t brain insult,” he said.

Other experts were less convinced, noting inherent weaknesses in such a study, despite the expertise of the group conducting it. It would be pre- mature, they said, to conclude there is a mysterious new medical syndrome with an unknown cause.

The study’s lead author, Dr. Douglas H. Smith, director of the Center for Brain Injury and Repair at the University of Pennsylvan­ia, emphasized there is much more to learn.

“This is a preliminar­y report,” he said. “We thought it was important to get it out from a public-health standpoint.”

But, he added, the patients’ symptoms were notable. “Uniformly, everyone who saw these patients was absolutely convinced,” he said. “It looked like concussion pathology. Processing speed, inability to remember — those are such classic symptoms we see in concussion.”

“We all believe this is a real syndrome,” Smith added. “This is concussion without blunt head trauma.”

Like concussion patients, some of the diplomats improved on their own, while others recovered only after therapy to regain balance or cognition. “Many went from being miserable to returning to work,” Smith said.

Smith and his colleagues do not think audible sound caused the injuries, as sound in an audible range does not damage the brain. Perhaps, they speculated, a device that produced another sort of harmful energy also produced an audible sound. Low-frequency infrasound, highfreque­ncy ultrasound and microwaves have all been shown to dam- age the brain, the researcher­s noted.

One drawback to the report is that there was no comparison group, said Karen Postal, immediate past president of the American Academy of Clinical Neuropsych­ology.

The researcher­s relied on a battery of cognitive tests that determined cognition had been weakened or impaired if scores were below the 40th percentile. But scores between the 25th and 75th percentile­s are considered normal, Postal noted.

A control group would have shown whether the diplomats who were posted in Cuba did better or worse than other subjects similar to them — ideally others in the State Department who also reported sleep problems, which can interfere with thinking.

“It is common for injured people to have one or two low scores when given a large set of tests,” Postal said. “These test results may represent normal variabilit­y.”

Dr. Christophe­r Muth, a neurologis­t at Rush University Medical Center in Chicago, wrote an accompanyi­ng editorial noting that the report should be viewed with caution.

The diplomats were examined an average of 203 days after the purported incidents, and it is not known if they spoke to one another about their symptoms.

“With certain symptoms, you have to take the word of people describing the symptoms,” Muth said in a telephone interview.

At the same time, the examiners knew the patients had been complainin­g of neurologic­al symptoms, he noted. Some of the findings depend on the doctor’s subjective interpreta­tion, which could have been biased.

Since many of these symptoms are common in the general population, “you don’t necessaril­y have to evoke a whole new syndrome to explain them,” Muth said. “At the same time, no one clear diagnosis immediatel­y comes to mind that can fully explain all of the reported findings.”

 ?? MERIDITH KOHUT/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Investigat­ing what had been described as sonic attacks on diplomats in Cuba in 2016, experts said they appeared to have concussion symptoms.
MERIDITH KOHUT/THE NEW YORK TIMES Investigat­ing what had been described as sonic attacks on diplomats in Cuba in 2016, experts said they appeared to have concussion symptoms.

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