Hi hjz,

Welcome to our MM family!
I’m so sorry to hear your precious little one has to deal with this disease, but thank God there is something that can be done to help her; to give her a long, healthy normal life she deserves, but the only treatment for this disease is surgery. I know brain surgery can be scary, but if you read most of the prior posts, you’ll see that most children are resilient and are up and around in no time, depending on their clinical condition at the time and if you have a doctor with MM experience, then the outcome is very good! In my opinion, the risk of a stroke, or perhaps worse, far outweighs the risk of surgery.
I only wish my niece had the opportunity your daughter has, to be diagnosed and have the surgery before a major stroke, but she didn’t, and ended up having four debilitating strokes before her surgery, and now she’ll never have the normal life that we had hoped for before hearing the words moyamoya.
As you know, with moyamoya disease, your brain is losing the proper blood, oxygen and nutrients your brain must have. If she was diagnosed with moyamoya, she has the puff of smoke on the angiogram, and that puff of smoke is her brain growing it’s own MM vessels. Those same MM vessels are trying to get the proper blood flow her brain needs, BUT,
they are abnormal mm vessels, and although they are supplying blood to her brain, they are weak and fragile vessels and over time they can rupture or bleed, which can cause a stroke. So even though she seems fine now, at any time, she is at risk for a stroke with this disease. I am not a doctor and I don’t know her specific history, I’m strictly talking from experiencing the worse this disease can offer by not having the surgery in time. This is a progressive disease, and that’s why we urge prompt attention to it.
I certainly don't want to frighten you, but I've seen the best and the worse from this disease, so I give my 2 cents, and hope and pray for the best.
Please give your daughter a big hug for me.

Mar