PatnPhoenix
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I Love MM.com!
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Michelle Makes sense on the wait. My wife Pam is 54, diagnosed at 52. Light and sound sensitivity is still there for Pam. Probably will be from now on. We are in Phoenix. I feel that if we were anywhere else in the country, she would have died. Between the Arizona Heart Institute and Barrow Neurological Institute, we both feel like they saved her life. Google these places. The founders of both of these institutions personally worked on my wife, the best in the world, in my opinion. Stanford University Medical has a good program also. I believe the founder of this site had surgery at Stanford Medical.
In my opinion, a neurosurgeon familiar with this disease is very aggressive in getting these surgeries done asap. I don't know who you are seeing and I wouldn't know if you told me. Research, research, research. The STA-MCA surgery video is available on line. If you watch that you will get a grasp of the amazing delicacy of this particular procedure. The reason for these surgeries is to basically bypass the clogged arteries to restore blood flow to the brain. The temporal arteries that are incorporated into STA-MCA are not as big as the carotid arteries but better than nothing.
Success and a good prognosis is relative to damage done. In Pam's case looking back, she was having was having TIAs since she was around 42. The general age of onset in adults. Very rare for women anyway. We live in Phoenix, were very active, going to concerts, sporting events and such. She fell frequently, started having trouble with stairs occasionally at football games, standing on slopes and maintaining her balance, those types of things. Many more instances to mention. We drink and tailgate and have a good time. A lot of these things we wrote off to maybe too much to drink, not eating, the heat at games.
Bottom line, this disease was chipping away at her for 10 years. Halloween night 2008 she collapsed while handing out candy. She was fine after about 30 minutes. Same thing happened again the next evening. Same result. The search for help began. About this date 2 years ago we started to make some headway on a diagnosis. And here we are today.
I lost a paragraph on Dr.s somewhere. Anyway, I have found Dr.s that are a little older and more experienced deal with MM better. Not to say the young guys don't know what's going on. Always ask if they have even heard of MM. You will be astonished how little is known. Take care, Pat
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