Indiana,
USA 23 April, 2015
- A doctoral student who moved from India to Indiana to study computer science
and was complaining of headaches and fatigue, shocked the medical community and
herself when doctors discovered a brain tumor that contained bones, hair and
teeth.
On her blog
26-year-old Yamini Karanam wrote that initially she thought she may be tired or
that her school work was too difficult. When she went on a vacation, she wound
up sleeping for two weeks straight, and soon after started suffering from
headaches. After three months of testing, doctors determined she had a tumor,
which by that point had left her mostly bedridden.
Though doctors had
located a tumor in her brain’s pineal region, they determined that removal was
risky and could cause irreversible damage to her brain. After six months of
searching, Karanam found Dr. Hrayr Shaninian, a neurologist at the Skullbase
Institute in Los Angeles, who agreed to perform the surgery.
Friends held a
fund-raiser to
fly her out to Los Angeles for the procedure, which occurred April 15. Through
an incision in the back of her head, doctors used an endoscope to enter the
area of her brain where the tumor was, The
Washington Post reported. There instead of finding a tumor surgeons found a
teratoma -- a mass of bone, hair and teeth.
Teratomas are
embryonal tumors -- the most common brain tumors in infants less than 36 months
old -- that are typically benign, but are defined as being composed either of
tissues that are foreign to the area, or tissues that derive from all three of
the germ layers. Germ layers contribute to the formation of all organs and
tissues during embryonic development, according to The
Embryo Project Encyclopedia. These masses can sometimes contain
hair, teeth, bone neurons or even eyes.
"This is my
second one, and I've probably taken out 7,000 or 8,000 brain tumors,” Shahinian
told NBC 4.
Karanam referred to
the tumor as her “evil twin sister who’s been torturing me for the past 26
years,” NBC 4 reported.
According to The
Washington Post, it’s unclear whether the teratoma is Karanam’s twin, but it
was killing her.
Shaninian said her
tumor was not cancerous, and expects her to make a full recovery.- FoxNews. Com
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