Know About Awake Brain Surgery
Awake brain surgery
also called an awake craniotomy, is a type of procedure performed on the brain
while you are awake and alert. Awake brain surgery is used to treat some brain
(neurological) conditions, including some brain tumours or epileptic seizures.
If your tumour or
the area of your brain where your seizures occur (epileptic focus) is near the
parts of your brain that control vision, movement, or speech, you may need to
be awake during surgery. Your surgeon may ask you questions and monitor the
activity in your brain as you respond.
Your responses help
your surgeon to ensure that he or she treats the correct area of your brain
needing surgery. The procedure also lowers the risk of damage to functional
areas of your brain that could affect your vision, movement, or speech.
If a tumour or
section of your brain that causes seizures needs surgical removal, doctors must
be sure that they are not damaging an area of the brain that affects your
language, speech, and motor skills.
It's difficult to
pinpoint those areas exactly before surgery. Awake brain surgery allows the
surgeon to know exactly which areas of your brain control those functions and
avoid them.
Doctors first will
determine if awake brain surgery is the right choice for you. Doctors will also
explain what you can expect during the procedure and the benefits and risks of
awake brain surgery.
Awake brain surgery
offers many advantages. People who have brain tumours or seizure centres
(epileptic foci) near functional brain tissue, whose conditions were once
thought inoperable, may consider awake brain surgery to reduce complications
and the risk of damage to functional brain tissue.
Awake brain surgery
may help safely reduce the size of growing brain tumours, which may prolong
life and improve quality of life.
As with any brain
surgery, awake brain surgery has the potential for risks and complications.
These include bleeding, brain swelling, infection, brain damage or death.
Other surgical
complications may include seizures, muscle weakness, and problems with memory
and thinking.
Before surgery, your neurosurgeon or a speech-language pathologist may ask you to identify pictures and words on cards or on a computer so that your answers can be compared during surgery.
During Surgery:Â