HOME CANCER GLOSSARY  CANCER PHOTOS  NEW CANCER BOOKS  LINKING  ADVERTISE

   
 

Free Financial Help for Cancer Patients
Gov't regulated program

Breast Cancer "Switch" Found

Cancer Pictures

Best Natl Cancer Ctrs

Cancer Centers
by State


Cancer Societies

Newest Treatments
by cancer type

MyCancerNews.com

Cancer Newsletters

Medical Journals

Cancer Calculator

Nat'l Cancer Inst.

MedLine Cancer

Chemotherapy

Other helpful links

Additional Help
for Cancer Patients

More Cancer Photos

Children's Health Children's Diseases and Conditions

Ahmad's Story: A Young Boy Prepares for Brain Surgery


Watch Video

Summary & Participants

A brain tumor diagnosis in a child can be scary and confusing for the child and immeasurably painful for his parents. On today's webcast we'll look at the story of 11-year-old Ahmad Abdella, who was diagnosed with a brain tumor at age 11.

Medically Reviewed On: May 07, 2008

Webcast Transcript


ANNOUNCER: It can be two of the most frightening words a doctor can say. Brain tumor. For a parent those words can be even more paralyzing when they're meant for your child.

FRED J. EPSTEIN, MD: Here we see a beautiful boy, right? That's you. He's got a brain tumor. A brain tumor. And as a parent, you say, "My God, that's like lightening that comes out of the sky, right?" In fact, I know what you do. You wake up at night and you say, "I wish it was a dream" or you wish it was you.

ANNOUNCER: Eleven-year-old Ahmad had only recently begun complaining of the headaches and difficulty breathing he had suffered from but couldn't articulate since the age of 8.

AHMAD: When I have my headaches they come up from my nose into my eyes.

ANNOUNCER: Thinking it was a sinus problem, his father took him to an ear, nose and throat specialist.

FATHER: He checked his nose and then he said, he got a sinus. Yeah, he has to go look at the scan.

DR. ALLAN: Then he did a CT scan of the sinuses.

FATHER: Yeah, and then they saw something in the back. Then they say, he must come in the following day to do the MRI.

DR. ALLAN: So basically they sort of, as we say, backed into the diagnosis of the brain tumor. They weren't really looking for a brain tumor. They thought he had a sinus infection.

FATHER: Yeah.

FRED J. EPSTEIN, MD: When you have this -- it's a tough diagnosis. It's very hard to make a diagnosis because look, if somebody has headaches, it's very difficult for a pediatrician to know that it's a tumor because 99.999999% of children with headaches -- anybody with headaches doesn't have a tumor.

ANNOUNCER: Although it seemed shocking for someone so very young to be stricken with something as serious as a brain tumor, almost 2,000 children in the United States get that very diagnosis each year.

FRED J. EPSTEIN, MD: People don't realize this. Brain tumors in children are one of the more common serious problems that occur. You know, everybody has heard of leukemia, muscular dystrophy. Brain tumors are among the most common. Right after leukemia. But you know, we're lucky about one thing, we don't want children to get brain tumors, but when they get them, there's a great chance that they're benign. They're not cancerous. Many, many, many, many of them when we can cure them so you'll live to be a 100 years old.

DR. ALLAN: One or two?

AHMAD: One.

DR. ALLAN: One or two?

AHMAD: One. Two.

DR. ALLAN: Okay. So he may have a little weakness when he looks to the left suggestive of a weakness of the muscle that brings the eye outward. We call it the sixth nerve or the lateral rectus. And he may have some double vision on that basis, which you can get from increased pressure.

Page 1 of 2 Next Page >>

RELATED PROGRAMS
 

Alternative Therapies

Melanoma Skin Cancer

Complementary and Alternative Cancer
Care Guidelines

Cancer Treatment Research Library

Dangerous Doctors
...is yours safe?

Cancer Archives

 

 

MEMBERSHIPS:     

About us
Privacy policy
Conditions of use

 


Nat'l Cervical
Cancer Coalition

logo nbtf
National Brain
Tumor
Foundation


Nat'l Ovarian
Cancer Coalition


Breast Cancer
Research

MCN
My
Cancer News

 

Special
Thanks
 TECH SUPPORT

Codebrain
Codebelly


NOTICE:  No information on this CANCER research site is provided, intended or implied to substitute for trained, professional medical advice, CANCER diagnosis or CANCER treatmentAs a condition of use of this cancer website, all visitors agree to seek trained medical advice before using any cancer treatment or cancer information found on this website and agree discuss these with their physicians prior to use and to hold RobertsReview and all entities affiliated with, contributing to, and/or operating this cancer research website harmless in regard to all information provided herein and/or from any decisions that may flow from use of this information.  RobertsReview in no way recommends, endorses or verifies the accuracy or claims of any of the cancer information provided herein by "third parties" regardless of their affiliation.

©1997-2006 RobertsReview, Wickford, RI USA. No information contained on this website may be reproduced in any form in any media.  Single copies may be reprinted for non-commercial use.