Vagus Nerve Stimulation surgery, a last-ditch endeavor to operate seizures, stirs up a controversy amongst those who have the gismo implanted. Many patients love the relief from unruly seizures. However, many other patients hate the side-effects caused by the surgical operation and the devise.
Up to 70 percent of population could have their seizures controlled with prescription drugs. For the remaining 30 percent, surgical operation may be an option. Epilepsy surgical operation has many dissimilar variations; temporal lobe resection, extratemporal cortical resection, and corpus callosal section.
Besides these radical surgeries, Vagus or Vagal Nerve Stimulation surgical operation (Vns) implants a Vns pulse generator under the skin of the chest in a surgically created pocket. The electrode is tunneled subcutaneously from a neck incision. The Vns uses electrical pulses delivered to the vagus nerve in the neck which voyage up into the brain. The vagus nerve has very few pain receptors and therefore provides a good pathway to deliver signals to the brain.
No one knows why the Vns reduces seizures. Proponents believe that persistent Vns causes changes in brain chemistry that may sacrifice excitatory amino acids and/or increase inhibitory levels. Patients report that Vns reduces the number, length, severity of seizures, and the length of salvage time after seizures. Some report improved ability of life. "It has been practically three years since my Vns, and the only thing I would have changed is that I would have had it about ten years earlier than I did."
However, one foremost thing doctors forget to tell you before they implant the Vns in a ,000 surgery: If you have a heart attack, you can not be treated with an automatic external defibrillator (Aed). Patients with Vns cannot receive accident rehabilitation with electrical charges used to restore normal heart rhythm to patients in cardiac arrest.
Copyright © 2005 Jeanette J. Fisher. All proprietary reserved.
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