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I had to get a shunt becuase I had hydrocephalus. I no longer have a brain tumor so the shunt is no longer needed. Do you think I might be able to get it out because I am no longer using it. The doctors sound like they don't take it out too often, but I want mine out. So did any of you get yours out or knoiw someone who did? What was used to patch the hole they drilled in the skull? Would you suggest I take it out? I mean God didn't give it to me so I think I want it out. What do you all think?

2007-02-03 12:52:43 · 4 answers · asked by Anonymous in Health Diseases & Conditions Cancer

4 answers

If your doctor want to leave it in you are going to have to leave it in. It is to prevent an excess of brain fluid from building up and that could cause extreme headaches and possibly death. So leave it in and thank god that you are cancer free.

2007-02-03 12:58:20 · answer #1 · answered by mom of twins 6 · 0 0

Pineal Tumors in the region of the pineal gland account for about one percent of brain tumors. Many different types of tumors with completely different characteristics occur in this region, but the most common type is called a germinoma.

Symptoms
When pineal tumors occur in childhood, they can produce an early puberty, especially in boys. This type of tumor causes pressure in the channel that connects two cavities of the brain where fluid flows around the brain and spinal cord. The tumor can cause pressure inside the brain (leading to hydrocephalus), swelling inside the eye and vomiting. It can also cause paralysis of the upward gaze, sagging or drooping of the upper eyelid and a loss of reflex reactions in the eye.

Causes and Risk Factors
Pineal tumors can occur at any age, but they are most common in childhood.

Diagnosis
A neurologic evaluation should be done if a patient has slowly increasing signs of mental dysfunction, new seizures, persistent headaches or evidence that there is pressure inside the skull (such as vomiting or swelling or protrusion of the blind spot at the back of the eye). A neurologist (a doctor who has received special additional training in the diagnosis and treatment of disorders of the brain, spinal cord and nerves) will perform a complete examination.

He or she may also request that a magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scan or a computed tomography (CT or CAT) scan be done, as well as chest X-rays, to determine if the tumor has spread from another part of the body. An MRI usually finds low-grade astrocytomas earlier than CT. Cerebral angiography is rarely used to diagnose a brain tumor, but it may be done before surgery.

Depending on the patient's symptoms, specialized tests may be done, including tests of the field of vision, the sharpness of vision and hearing. If the results of other tests are not conclusive, an examination of the fluid that surrounds the brain and spinal cord may be done, although it is usually unnecessary. It is essential for diagnosing chronic or subacute meningitis or for identifying benign hypertension inside the skull.

Treatment
Treatment of a brain tumor depends on the nature of the tumor, how rapidly it is growing, what symptoms it is causing and where it is located. Several treatment approaches may be used. Surgery is usually done to make a diagnosis and to improve symptoms. This may be enough to cure benign tumors.

Radiation therapy is required to treat gliomas. Radiation therapy may also be beneficial in the short-term for tumors that have spread from other parts of the body. Chemotherapy also benefits some patients with such tumors.

2007-02-03 13:02:23 · answer #2 · answered by Jeanette M 4 · 0 1

there is not any such ingredient as maximum cancers testing. you've gotten all started having mammograms through now and that i wish you've been having wide-spread pap smears. In Australia after we turn 50 we get examined for colon maximum cancers yet except for those 3 we in common words get assessments carried out if we've indicators. if you're worried about inheriting lung maximum cancers then you truly should not be, lung maximum cancers isn't hereditary. If the physician develop into in touch about the calcium then he may be following up with extra scans.

2016-11-24 23:20:56 · answer #3 · answered by withy 4 · 0 0

Your question lacks internal logic. You want the shunt out because "God didn't give it to you", but you have no problem with removing the tumor?

If you are smart, and enjoy breathing, you will follow your doctor's advice!

2007-02-03 13:39:19 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 1 1

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