10-yr-old girl plays Candy Crush on mobile when docs remove her brain tumour

Agencies
September 11, 2017

Chennai, Sept 11: She was playing her favourite game on her uncle’s mobile phone when a team of surgeons were removing a tumour from the most sensitive part of her brain at a hospital in Chennai recently.

By staying awake, talking and moving her limbs, 10-year-old Nandini gave her doctors the confidence that they were on the right track.

The Class V student, who is also a Bharatanatyam dancer, was brought to SIMS Hospital with complaints of sudden onset of fits. Brain scan revealed that she had a tumour in an important area of brain which controls the movement of the left half of the body, including face, hand and leg.

SIMS Hospital neurosurgeon Dr Roopesh Kumar told her parents that if the tumour grew further, it could cause paralysis or could be fatal.

In a conventional procedure, called craniotomy, a disc of bone is removed from the skull using special tools to give surgeons access to the brain when the patient is unconscious.

"I did not want to go in for the conventional method of removing the tumour. It was in the sensitive part of the brain and if we accidentally touched a wrong nerve, it could cause complete paralysis of left half of her body," he said.

The doctors decided to do the same procedure by keeping the patient awake and alert. "That way, I will know exactly which areas of your brain control those functions and avoid them," Dr Kumar said.

The awake surgery is done in nearly 2% of brain tumour patients who are adults, but is rare in children, said SIMS Institute of Neurosciences director Dr Suresh Bapu. The patients feel no pain during the surgery since the neurons in the brain don't have pain receptors.

While her parents were initially hesitant, the surgeons took the help of the patient's uncle in Puducherry, who is a doctor, to convince them.

"I was in the theatre when the removed the tumour. Nandini was playing Candy Crush on my cellphone. She moved her hands and legs when we asked her to do so. The surgeon had to make sure that the point he is operating on does not affect her mobility. She was brave," said her uncle.

The family told doctors that they were worried about the post-surgical stress but doctors said studies from medical literature showed that such surgeries were safe in children.

"It's rare in children, but we did have enough evidence," he said.

In June 2017, World Neurosurgery, a medical journal, published the psychiatric and psychological impact of the awake brain tumour surgeries in children after following up on case sheets of seven children -- aged between 8 and 16 -- post surgery.

The results showed that none of the children had initial psychiatric problems. While parents experienced anxiety, no child showed signs of post-traumatic stress disorder.

Such studies gave confidence to the entire team, said neuro anesthetist Dr Sudhakar Subramaniam, who stood by the patient side during the three and a half hour surgery.

At the end of the procedure, she was moving her hands and legs. She was discharged from hospital last Friday, two days after the surgery. Nandini told the doctors that she would resume Bharatanatyam practice in a few days.

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News Network
January 7,2020

Mangaluru, Jan 7: A ten-year-old boy who suffered severe injuries after drowning in Kadri temple pond died on Monday,

Police said that the deceased has been identified as Sandesh, resident of Athani taluk.

Sandesh drowned while taking a dip in a pond at Kadri Shree Manjunatha Temple on Sunday evening. He was immediately rushed to the hospital in the city, however, he died on Monday morning after he stopped responding to the treatment.

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News Network
May 10,2020

Bengaluru, May 10: Karnataka on Sunday reported 59 new cases of coronavirus, taking the total number of cases in the state to 848, informed state health department.
Out of the total number of cases, 422 people have been discharged and 31 have died due to the infection in the state.
The health department further informed that six COVID-19 patients are currently in the Intensive Care Unit.

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News Network
February 11,2020

Bengaluru, Feb 11: Onion price dropped to Rs 25-30 per kg on Monday, down from the dizzying Rs 200/kg in December and January. The price had spiked because of excess rain, which ruined the crop in several parts of the country.

With supply stabilising, especially from Maharashtra and northern Karnataka, and exports banned, the rate is now easing, officials said.

Consumers may be smiling but farmers are worried as they are not able to make more than Rs 17/kg as against the expected Rs 40.

"We get onions from Nasik and Sholapur in Maharashtra. Nasik onions used to be exported but since that is currently banned, they are landing in Bengaluru, leaving the market here with a surplus," said K Lokesh, president, Karnataka State Onion Merchants Association.

A farmer from Sholapur wh o was part of a onion growers' delegation which met traders in Bengaluru, said, "The cost of everything has gone up. Labour charges and fuel prices are draining us. How can we survive? How can I pay for my children's education?"

Another Sholapur farmer rued: "My daughter's wedding is in March. How am I going to meet all the expenses? I have to pay for labour, transportation, gunny bags and when everything adds up, I don't get to save more than Rs 30,000 in a month."

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