How punny.
More seriously, has anyone here gone into surgery without knowing exactly where their seizures are coming from? I've been going through testing and monitoring for several years now, and while my video EEGs show consistent evidence of seizure activity in my left temporal lobe, all of my imaging studies look normal.
I'm apparently a rare case. Yet even as my chance of success keeps dropping (we're down from 90% to 30%), I keep hearing that my seizures need to be controlled before I have the one that ruins my life. Sure. I get that.
I'm scheduled to go in for surgery in late September. I'll have subdural strips and grids attached and I'll be monitored for seizures. I'll get mapped. But if they find the focus and can safely remove it, I'll need to make a decision about whether to proceed practically overnight. I expressed this concern to the team as well as the neurosurgeon. They all told me it would be best if I went in with my mind made up. I just don't understand how I'm supposed to decide when the seizures could be coming from anywhere in my left temporal lobe, possibly even my left frontal lobe or right temporal lobe. I imagine removing tissue from each of those would have different consequences.
I'm trying to compile a list of questions for the neurosurgeon. Meanwhile, I'm strongly considering backing out now that the day is getting closer and closer. (Is this see-sawing normal?)
Three days ago, I had nine seizures and three auras. (Before that, I went about two weeks without anything.) I slept through the following day. I've been having auras since. I've been trying to ask myself if this is something I can deal with the rest of my life. I understand the seizures are dangerous, so this might sound a little odd. I've been trying to explain that the seizures themselves aren't such a bad experience as the memory issues, the decline in functioning, the social problems, and all the other stuff that comes along after them. Here's the kicker. The surgery could stop the seizures and therefore remove some of the danger, but it could also make some of the problems I want to fix worse. Permanently. Pardon the outburst, but seriously, WTF?!
Going out of my mind, here.
More seriously, has anyone here gone into surgery without knowing exactly where their seizures are coming from? I've been going through testing and monitoring for several years now, and while my video EEGs show consistent evidence of seizure activity in my left temporal lobe, all of my imaging studies look normal.
I'm apparently a rare case. Yet even as my chance of success keeps dropping (we're down from 90% to 30%), I keep hearing that my seizures need to be controlled before I have the one that ruins my life. Sure. I get that.
I'm scheduled to go in for surgery in late September. I'll have subdural strips and grids attached and I'll be monitored for seizures. I'll get mapped. But if they find the focus and can safely remove it, I'll need to make a decision about whether to proceed practically overnight. I expressed this concern to the team as well as the neurosurgeon. They all told me it would be best if I went in with my mind made up. I just don't understand how I'm supposed to decide when the seizures could be coming from anywhere in my left temporal lobe, possibly even my left frontal lobe or right temporal lobe. I imagine removing tissue from each of those would have different consequences.
I'm trying to compile a list of questions for the neurosurgeon. Meanwhile, I'm strongly considering backing out now that the day is getting closer and closer. (Is this see-sawing normal?)
Three days ago, I had nine seizures and three auras. (Before that, I went about two weeks without anything.) I slept through the following day. I've been having auras since. I've been trying to ask myself if this is something I can deal with the rest of my life. I understand the seizures are dangerous, so this might sound a little odd. I've been trying to explain that the seizures themselves aren't such a bad experience as the memory issues, the decline in functioning, the social problems, and all the other stuff that comes along after them. Here's the kicker. The surgery could stop the seizures and therefore remove some of the danger, but it could also make some of the problems I want to fix worse. Permanently. Pardon the outburst, but seriously, WTF?!
Going out of my mind, here.
