Los Angeles Times

RFK Jr. opens up on why he ‘can’t stand’ his voice

The presidenti­al candidate has spasmodic dysphonia, a neurologic­al condition that affects the vocal cords

- By James Rainey

There was a time before the turn of the millennium when Robert F. Kennedy Jr. gave a full-throated accounting of himself and the things he cared about. He recalls his voice then as “unusually strong,” so much so that he could fill large auditorium­s with his words — no amplificat­ion needed.

The independen­t presidenti­al candidate recounts those times somewhat wistfully, telling interviewe­rs he “can’t stand” the sound of his voice today — sometimes choked, halting and slightly tremulous.

The cause of RFK Jr.’s vocal distress? Spasmodic dysphonia, a rare neurologic­al condition in which an abnormalit­y in the brain’s neural network results in involuntar­y spasms of the muscles that open or close the vocal cords.

“I feel sorry for the people who have to listen to me,” Kennedy said in a phone interview with The Times, his voice as strained as it sounds in his public appearance­s. “My voice doesn’t really get tired. It just sounds terrible. But the injury is neurologic­al, so actually the more I use the voice, the stronger it tends to get.”

Since declaring his bid for the presidency a year ago, the 70-year-old environmen­tal lawyer has discussed his frayed voice only on occasion, usually when asked by a reporter. He told The Times: “If I could sound better, I would.”

SD, as it’s known, affects about 50,000 people in North America, although that estimate may be off because of undiagnose­d and misdiagnos­ed cases, according to Dysphonia Internatio­nal, a nonprofit that organizes support groups and funds research.

As with Kennedy, cases typically arise in midlife, though increased recognitio­n of SD has led to more people being diagnosed at younger ages. The disorder, also known as laryngeal dystonia, affects women more often than men.

Internet searches for the condition have spiked, as Kennedy and his gravelly voice have become staples on the news.

Dysphonia Internatio­nal’s article “What is wrong with RFK Jr.’s voice?” got at least 10 times the traffic of other items.

Those with SD usually have healthy vocal cords. Because of this, and the fact that the condition makes some people sound like they are on the verge of tears, some doctors once believed that the croaking or breathy vocalizati­ons were tied to psychologi­cal trauma. They often prescribed treatment by a psychother­apist.

But in the early 1980s, researcher­s, including Dr. Herbert Dedo of UC San Francisco, recognized that SD was a condition rooted in the brain.

Researcher­s have not been able to find the cause or causes of the disorder.

There is speculatio­n that a genetic predisposi­tion might be set off by some event — physical or emotional — that triggers a change in neural networks.

Some who live with SD say the spasms came out of the blue, seemingly unconnecte­d to other events, while others report that they followed an emotionall­y devastatin­g personal setback, an injury accident or a severe infection.

Kennedy said he was teaching in 1996 at Pace University School of Law in White Plains, N.Y., when he noticed a problem with his voice. He was 42.

His campaigns for clean water and other causes in those days meant that he traveled the country, sometimes appearing in court or giving speeches. He lectured, of course, in his law school classes and cohosted a radio show. Asked whether it was hard to hear his voice gradually devolve, Kennedy said, “I would say it was ironic, because I made my living on my voice.

“For years people asked me if I had any trauma at that time,” he added. “My life was a series of traumas ... so there was nothing in particular that stood out.”

He was approachin­g his 10th birthday when his uncle, President John F. Kennedy, was assassinat­ed. When RFK Jr. was 14, his father was fatally shot in Los Angeles, on the night he won California’s 1968 Democratic primary for president.

Kennedy also lost two younger brothers. David died in 1984 of a heroin overdose at age 28, and Michael died in 1997 in an accident in Aspen, Colo., while skiing with Kennedy, then 43, and other family members.

It was much more recently, and two decades after the speech disorder cropped up, that Kennedy came up with a theory about a possible cause. Like many of his highly controvers­ial and oft-debunked pronouncem­ents in recent years, it involved a familiar culprit: a vaccine.

Kennedy said that while he was preparing litigation against the makers of flu vaccines in 2016, his research led him to the written inserts manufactur­ers include with the medication­s. He said he saw spasmodic dysphonia on a long list of possible side effects.

“That was the first I ever realized that,” he said.

Although he acknowledg­ed that there is no proof of a connection between the f lu vaccines he once received annually and SD, he told The Times he continues to view the flu vaccine as “at least a potential culprit.”

Kennedy said he no longer has the flu vaccine paperwork that triggered his suspicion, but his campaign forwarded a written disclosure for a later f lu vaccine. The 24page document lists commonly recognized adverse reactions, including pain, swelling, muscle aches and fever. It also lists dozens of less-common reactions that users said they experience­d. “Dysphonia” is on the list, though the paperwork says “it is not always possible to reliably estimate their frequency or establish a causal relationsh­ip to the vaccine.”

Public health experts have slammed Kennedy and his anti-vaccine group, Children’s Health Defense, for advancing unsubstant­iated claims, including that vaccines cause autism and that COVID-19 vaccines caused a spike of sudden deaths among healthy young people.

Dr. Timothy Brewer, a professor of medicine and epidemiolo­gy at UCLA, said an additional study cited by the Kennedy campaign to The Times referred to reported adverse reactions that were unverified and extremely rare.

“We shouldn’t minimize risks or overstate them,” Brewer said. “With these influenza vaccines, there are real benefits that so far outweigh the potential harm cited here that it’s not worth considerin­g those types of reactions further.”

Anyone with concerns about influenza vaccine side effects should consult their physician, he said.

So what does research suggest about SD?

“We just don’t know what brings it on,” said Dr. Michael Johns, director of the USC Voice Center and an authority on spasmodic dysphonia. “Intubation, emotional trauma, physical trauma, infections and vaccinatio­ns are all things that are incredibly common. And it’s very hard to pin causation on something that is so common when this is a condition that is so rare.”

No two SD sufferers sound the same.

For some, spasms push the vocal cords too far apart, causing breathy and nearly inaudible speech. For others, such as Kennedy, the larynx muscles push the vocal cords closer together, creating a strained or strangled delivery.

“I would say it was a very, very slow progressio­n,” Kennedy said last week. “I think my voice was getting worse and worse.”

There were times when mornings were especially difficult.

“When I opened my mouth, I would have no idea what would come out, if anything,” he said.

One of the most common treatments for the disorder is injecting Botox into the muscles that bring the vocal cords together.

Kennedy said he received Botox injections every three or four months for about 10 years. But he called the treatment “not a good fit for me,” because he was “super sensitive to the Botox.” He recalled losing his voice entirely after the injections before it would return days later, somewhat smoother.

Looking for a surgical solution, Kennedy traveled in May 2022 to Japan. Surgeons in Kyoto implanted a titanium bridge between his vocal cords (also known as vocal folds) to keep them from pressing together.

The procedure has not been approved by regulators in the United States.

Kennedy told a YouTube interviewe­r last year that his voice was getting “better and better,” an improvemen­t he credited to the surgery and to alternativ­e therapies, including chiropract­ic care.

Johns cautioned that titanium bridge surgeries haven’t been consistent­ly effective or durable and said there have been reports of the devices fracturing, despite being implanted by reputable doctors. He suggested that the more promising avenue for breakthrou­ghs will be in treating the “primary condition, which is in the brain.”

Researcher­s are trying to find the locations in the brain that send faulty signals to the larynx. Once those neural centers are located, doctors might use deep stimulatio­n — like a pacemaker for the brain — to block the abnormal signals that cause vocal spasms. (Deep brain stimulatio­n is used to treat patients with Parkinson’s disease and other affliction­s.)

Long and grueling presidenti­al campaigns have stolen the voices of many candidates. But Kennedy said he is not concerned, since his condition is based on a neural disturbanc­e, not on one in his voice box.

“Actually, the more I use the voice, the stronger it tends to get,” he said. “It warms up when I speak.”

Kennedy was asked whether the loss of his full voice feels particular­ly frustratin­g given his family’s legacy of ringing oratory. He replied, his voice still raspy, “Like I said, it’s ironic.”

 ?? Genaro Molina Los Angeles Times ?? “I FEEL SORRY for the people who have to listen to me,” says Robert F. Kennedy Jr., who theorizes that a f lu vaccine led to his condition. Public health experts have slammed him for advancing unsubstant­iated claims.
Genaro Molina Los Angeles Times “I FEEL SORRY for the people who have to listen to me,” says Robert F. Kennedy Jr., who theorizes that a f lu vaccine led to his condition. Public health experts have slammed him for advancing unsubstant­iated claims.

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