Oman Daily Observer

Surgeons remove ‘heaviest recorded’ brain tumour

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MUMBAI: Surgeons who removed a massive brain tumour in a marathon seven-hour procedure said on Thursday it could be the heaviest ever recorded.

Santlal Pal, a 31-year-old shopkeeper, had been carrying around a tumour weighing nearly two kilos before the surgery on February 14.

Doctors at Mumbai’s BYL Nair Hospital where he was treated said the tumour was so large that “it appeared as if he had two heads mounted on top of each other”.

“It was an extremely daunting and complex surgery,” the hospital’s head of neurosurge­ry Trimurti Nadkarni said.

He said the operation took seven hours to complete and the patient required 11 units of blood.

“After the patient regained consciousn­ess, we researched and concluded this was the world’s heaviest tumour to be reported so far,” he added.

The tumour weighed 1.87 kilos, making it the heaviest ever to be successful­ly removed from a surviving patient, according to a hospital statement.

“It was a rare operation and the patient has survived. Before the surgery, he had minimal vision, which may improve now,” Nadkarni said.

The hospital said the patient had made a good recovery and was now walking and eating normally.

The previous heaviest tumour to be successful­ly excised from a patient who survived the procedure was 1.4 kilos, it said. — AFP

 ?? — AFP ?? Santlal Pal, 31, rests in his bed as his wife Manju, feeds him a slice of apple at the BYL Nair Hospital in Mumbai on Thursday.
— AFP Santlal Pal, 31, rests in his bed as his wife Manju, feeds him a slice of apple at the BYL Nair Hospital in Mumbai on Thursday.

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