Wednesday, August 27, 2008

Hey...it's not brain surgery

People are always comparing the difficulty of things to brain surgery. You ask someone how to do something and they reply with "it's not brain surgery." Well, today was my first encounter with an actual brain surgeon, and he didn't seem to think that his job was as hard as everyone makes it out to be.

Dr. J was young, somewhat surprisingly young. He seemed very competent though as he explained the retrosigmoid procedure to us. The surgeons drill a hole in the skull behind the ear, retract the brain, and excise the tumor. This procedure leaves a chance for hearing preservation, unlike the other main AN-removal technique known as translabyrinthine. In the translab procedure, the surgeons drill through the inner ear canal, destroying the hearing mechanisms, to get to the location of the tumor.

As Dr. J was talking and demonstrating the location on a skull, I took notice of his hands. They were kind of dry but also very steady. That seemed like a good sign to me. He also seemed very confident, but I never got a specific number of how many of these he had performed. Dr. K had said that they do essentially one per week, but I wasn't sure if that was just the two of them or if that figure included other skull base tumor doctors at the hospital.

Phil and I left that appointment feeling pretty good about the doctors we had met at Georgetown.

(In the interest of full disclosure, this post was actually written on 1/28/09.)

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