The Southland Times

Tumour turns out to be ‘evil twin’

- UNITED STATES Washington Post

Something was Yamini Karanam.

The PhD student had moved from Hyderabad, India, to Indiana to study computer science. But her new life in America was amiss. Once a brilliant student, she now had trouble understand­ing simple articles. Friends and colleagues would say things to her, only for the sentences to get mixed up in her mind.

Because that’s Karanam’s problem within her brain.

She went on holiday last year but returned even more exhausted than when she left. Karanam slept for two weeks straight, missing school.

‘‘Then came the headaches. Slips and misses at work followed,’’ she wrote on her blog. ‘‘There were doctors. First, a couple of them and then more.’’ Then came the ‘‘revelation": doctors spotted what they thought was a cyst on Karanam’s pineal gland, a tiny pea-like structure in the centre of the brain that French philosophe­r Rene Descartes called the ‘‘principal seat of the soul’’.

‘‘The fear didn’t sink in yet,’’ Karanam wrote. ‘‘[My] will was undeterred because it was hardly put to test. [My] energy levels were sinking and fatigue started crippling [my] days . . . Months and weeks slipped through [my] fingers. There weren’t any diagnostic procedures left to run on [me].

Consultati­ons followed procedures but nobody said anything useful. It was like white

wrong

with

where lay: deep noise passed from the doctor to the patient to the support system. Now, they called it a tumour and that’s all 21st-century medicine could do in three months.’’

Karanam grew sicker as the tumour grew. Reading was impossible. Soon, walking was, too.

Only 26, Karanam could barely eat. Pains ran from her head throughout her body.

‘‘But the men of science found no correlatio­n between her suffering and the images,’’ she wrote. ‘‘[I] thought they would take [my] problems and own them. But they don’t and they didn’t. There was frustratio­n and anger. Most of all, there was self-doubt.

‘‘When sanity is in question, the best of us lose ourselves to the answer.’’

Desperate to save Karanam’s life, her friends set up a fundraisin­g account online.

‘‘Yamini, a PhD student at Indiana University’s School of Informatic­s and one of my best friends, was diagnosed with a pineal tumour a few months ago,’’ the website read.

‘‘She has been seeing quite a few neurologis­ts and neurosurge­ons across the country in the past six months. Most of the doctors seem to think that the location of the tumour poses a lot of risks to the surgery and they think that the tumour could cause irreversib­le damage to her brain.’’

‘‘Could you please put an end to it one way or the other?’’ Karanam finally wrote to someone – God, doctors, anyone – on March 15.

Then came the medical procedure that would save Karanam’s life and reveal the bizarre malady behind her meltdown.

Karanam found a doctor, Hrayr Shahinian, performing radical ‘‘keyhole’’ brain surgeries at the Skullbase Institute in Los Angeles. Using the US$32,437 (NZ$42,826) her friends had raised for her, Karanam flew to LA and put her life in Shahinian’s hands.

Shahinian made a tiny incision in the back of Karanam’s head, then strung an endoscope into her skull and through a natural channel in her brain to the site of the tumour. That was when the doctor made a startling discovery.

Karanam’s tumour wasn’t just a tumour. It was a teratoma: a clump of bone, hair and teeth. A Frankenste­in’s monster within Karanam’s own mind.

Teratomas have baffled scientists for almost a century. Some have speculated that they are basically twins that never quite develop and are instead absorbed into the surviving baby’s body.

In fact, newborns occasional­ly have large teratomas attached to them like a conjoined twin. Other times, it is not until adulthood that people realise they have one.

In 2009, British man Gavin Hyatt ‘‘gave birth’’ to an ‘‘undevelope­d identical twin’’ when a small lump pushed its way out of his abdomen. Hyatt named the tiny creature ‘‘little Gav’’.

Earlier this year, doctors in Hong Kong discovered two partly developed foetuses inside a newborn’s abdomen.

It is not clear whether Karanam’s tumour was really her twin. But it was killing her.

Shahinian successful­ly removed the tumour, which was not cancerous. He now expects her to make a full recovery.

‘‘This is my second one,’’ he said..

 ?? Photo: WASHINGTON POST ?? Yamini Karanam, a PhD student from Hyderabad, India, who was studying computer science at Indiana University, fell ill and thought she had a brain tumour. It turned out to be a rare teratoma, a non-malignant a clump of bone, hair and teeth.
Photo: WASHINGTON POST Yamini Karanam, a PhD student from Hyderabad, India, who was studying computer science at Indiana University, fell ill and thought she had a brain tumour. It turned out to be a rare teratoma, a non-malignant a clump of bone, hair and teeth.
 ??  ?? Image of a pineocytom­a, a type of teratoma located in the brain’s pineal or suprasella­r regions. Some scientists speculate that teratomas are twins that never quite develop and are instead absorbed into the surviving baby’s body.
Image of a pineocytom­a, a type of teratoma located in the brain’s pineal or suprasella­r regions. Some scientists speculate that teratomas are twins that never quite develop and are instead absorbed into the surviving baby’s body.

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