Government Scientists Find No Brain Damage in “Havana Syndrome” Survivors

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Government Scientists Find No Brain Damage in “Havana Syndrome” Survivors
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A pair of new studies out of the National Institutes of Health have found that government agents who claim to have suffered from the so-called "Havana syndrome" had no lasting brain damage., scientists are saying that the findings seem to jibe with assertions from the intelligence community that whatever Havana syndrome may be, it

"We didn't see differences in the structure of the brain or even in the functional connectivity of the brain," Dr. Leighton Chan, the acting chief scientific officer of the NIH Clinical Center, toldDespite those findings, however, neither of the studies seek to minimize what their subjects have experienced — or rules out that something external may have caused their symptoms.

While these studies are a compelling update to the Havana syndrome quagmire, they're not without their critics., Stanford medicine and immunology professor David Relman said that his own review of the data suggests that some of them could have been victim to some sort of "directed pulsed radio frequency energy" attack.

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