Mar
Ex Member
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Hi Vahit, Welcome to our MM family!
The newly occurred vascular which is feeding the brain that you speak of is in fact moyamoya disease. With MMD, the arteries at the base of the brain narrow and close off, so your brain does not get the proper blood, oxygen and nutrients it needs, so your brain tries to compensate and grows it’s own vessels to help supply the brain with the blood it needs, but those vessels that grew are ABNORMAL vessels that are weak and fragile, and those newly occurred vessels you speak of are not equipped to deliver the volume of blood needed over a long period of time. MM is a progressive disease that only gets worse over time. That’s why every MM patient is at risk for a stroke or hemorrhage with this disease, and surgery is the ONLY treatment to help avoid that stroke/hemorrhage.
With the symptoms you’ve described, it sounds as though your daughter is having TIA’s (mini strokes) they usually don’t last long, but are warnings of a possible stroke/hemorrhage to come. That’s why prompt treatment is so vital, before a stroke occurs. Unfortunately, the ONLY option with this rare disease is surgery. Surgery introduces new blood flow to the brain by either “direct” or “indirect” bypasses. It’s very important that you find a doctor with MM experience. This is a rare disease, and there isn’t enough MM experience out there in the medical community yet, so you have to be proactive in finding a doctor who knows this disease and has treated this disease. That’s the key to success for your daughter, IMO.
At any phase you’re at risk for a stroke/hemorrhage. Don’t get me wrong, every case is different, depending on many individual factors, but never the less, those tiny weak vessels are capable of rupturing at any phase for a number of reasons, so waiting is risky. You’re considered very lucky if you get treatment BEFORE a stroke. That’s the point of surgery, to help avoid a stroke. So tracking is like a “wait and see” when she will stroke. With MM, you know a stroke is coming, you just don’t know when.
You are the first member that I’m aware of from Turkey, so I’m sorry to say I have no idea of a doctor there in Turkey with MM experience. But even here in the USA, any member who was treated successfully had to find a doctor who has MM experience because it is considered a rare disease.
Please seek a doctor with MM experience ASAP!! I will keep you and your daughter in my thoughts and prayers.
Please keep us posted.
Mar
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