Personal Trainer Grateful to 嘿嘿视频 Neurosurgeon for Getting Her Life Back on Track
Normally, Diana Lipari would push through the pain as she went about her day, but when a splitting headache hit her last summer she knew this was different.
鈥淚 had horrible pain in the back of my neck for about a week and I was not feeling right at all,鈥 says Lipari, a 36-year-old Brooklyn native and former school teacher. 鈥淭he pain was waking me up throughout the night.鈥
Her situation grew dire when she became completely immobile during a tutoring session. 鈥淎ll of the sudden I couldn鈥檛 move,鈥 she recalls.
She was rushed to the Emergency Department at 嘿嘿视频 Hospital鈥擝rooklyn, where a series of radiological exams revealed the source of her paralysis: a two-inch mass on her brain at the base of her skull.
鈥淎 tumor was exerting significant pressure on her brainstem,鈥 says David S. Gordon, MD, director of cranial, vascular, and skull-base neurosurgery at 嘿嘿视频 Hospital鈥擝rooklyn. 鈥淭he skull has fixed volume. Anything introduced into the intracranial space, like a tumor, results in an increase in pressure and displacement of normal structures that control the transmission of nerve impulses.鈥
In the back of the brain鈥攚here Lipari鈥檚 tumor was鈥攖he brainstem functions like a 鈥渃ontrol center,鈥 where all information going from the brain to the body and from the body to the brain passes through.
The growth was situated in a particular region of the brain called the cerebellum, which controls balance and coordination of motor function. For Lipari, who had just started working toward personal training certification, the tumor not only threatened her new career path鈥攂ut her life as well.
Dr. Gordon performed on Lipari a neurosurgical procedure known as a suboccipital craniectomy with frameless stereotactic navigation to remove the mass. It involves a computer guidance system that allowed Dr. Gordon to see a complete picture of Lipari鈥檚 brain during surgery and to monitor the movement of his instruments inside the skull. The technology enhances precision, allowing a surgeon to make a smaller opening to the brain and providing a greater margin of safety for the patient.
A year later, Lipari is back training hard at the gym鈥攁nd finishing up her certification. 鈥淚鈥檓 doing great,鈥 she says. 鈥淒r. Gordon saved my life. I鈥檒l never, ever take one moment for granted.鈥
Dr. Gordon continues to see Lipari regularly. 鈥淭hankfully, the mass was noncancerous, which is the best outcome you could hope for,鈥 says Dr. Gordon. 鈥淲e鈥檒l follow her over the course of several years with regular imaging to ensure continued good health.鈥
Dr. Gordon collaborates closely with colleagues throughout 嘿嘿视频 Health. With access to a wide array of resources, technology, and clinical talent, the and 嘿嘿视频鈥檚 Brain Tumor Center鈥攑art of Perlmutter Cancer Center鈥攁re equipped to treat any neuro-oncologic and cerebrovascular condition.
鈥淭his is an example of what we want to do every day for our patients,鈥 says John G. Golfinos, MD, co-director of the Brain Tumor Center and chair of 嘿嘿视频 Health鈥檚 Department of Neurosurgery. 鈥淲e have the best neurosurgeons in the field and our goal is always to improve the lives of our patients while prioritizing their safety.鈥