Major Studies Find No Evidence of Brain Injury in Havana Syndrome Cases

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Major Studies Find No Evidence of Brain Injury in Havana Syndrome Cases
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“While we did not identify significant differences in participants... it’s important to acknowledge that these symptoms are very real.'

Researchers at the National Institutes of Health examined dozens of government employees and their families who experienced “Havana Syndrome” and found no evidence of significant brain injury or other biomarkers that would explain their ailments. Despite the findings, the report authors say that the symptoms felt by these sufferers are real and often debilitating. In most cases, the patients describe an array of mysterious symptoms that began while they were stationed overseas.

“In this exploratory neuroimaging study, there was no significant MRI-detectable evidence of brain injury among the group of participants who experienced compared with a group of matched control participants,” the authors of the MRI study wrote. The same was largely true in the other study, with the scientists finding no significant differences with most of the tests they conducted.

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