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Hi Concerned Sister,Ifor
Submitted by birdman on Fri, 2020-01-17 - 20:35
Hi Concerned Sister,Ifor every patient. t sounds like you may have been reading some of my story, but to be sure I'll go over it again. I had the RNS unit implant just seven months ago. It's hard to measure if I'm better or worse off than before. If your measure is just seizure frequency then it seems like RNS treatment is doing little or no good. It seems like I have had a small increase in seizure frequency, but these seizures are happening without impaired awareness. Just previous to my surgery I was having seizures with impaired awareness pretty much once every month. Now I've been having other smaller seizures which I didn't notice very often before. With the RNS treatment patients are encouraged to use the magnet to mark sensations which even appear to be seizures. Maybe I've become more sensitive to these smaller seizures which I had learned to ignore over the years. Or, maybe these smaller events are the result of seizures which would have left me with impaired awareness in the past but now are being better controlled. I is much too early for me to make this measurement. I do go in for regular visits with my epileptologist where he does do some adjustments on the unit. I've had four visits with the doctor since my implantation. The first was just to review what RNS was recording in two weeks since my operation. What was interesting at that visit was that doctor revealed I had seizures where I did not use the magnet. Days after surgery I was taking pain pills (hydrocodone) and sleeping things off. When I woke up from the naps I was a bit confused, but I figured it was from the meds for pain. With the RNS recordings we were able to make a strong assumption that those groggy states were the result of seizures. I think it was turned on to stimulate and treat at the second visit a couple months after surgery (or maybe it was on to stimulate at the first visit). At each visit now the doctor hands me a "wand" to place over my implanted unit. We do a reading and he is able to make subtle adjustments to many different settings. It's all based on how well the seizures have been controlled. This is not a pacemaker that can be implanted and left to be; each unit must be programmed to perform its best for every patient.My third visit and adjustment came August, and then in September I noticed a small blister on one of my incisions. I snapped a picture and emailed that to my surgeon. Doctor had me in for a look, put on antibiotics, and three weeks later I was in for another operation to remove only the infected lead in my right temporal lobe. That lead was not replaced since it has been noticed that my seizures have been coming from the left temporal lobe only even though they recorded seizures on the right on an EEG in February. The weeks treating the infected lead were not pleasant but since then RNS has revealed some interesting information about my seizures. Mild seizures that I was sure were coming from the right have been recorded on my left. Using the magnet does not alter how the RNS unit treats, but it provides valuable information to patient and doctor about what's going on.RNS is a long term treatment that I'm thankful I am in,Mike