Tests and Procedures

Awake brain surgery

Overview Why it's done Risks What you can expect Results

What you can expect

Before surgery

Doctors first will determine if awake brain surgery is the right choice for you. Doctors will also explain what you can expect during the procedure and the benefits and risks of awake brain surgery.

Awake brain surgery offers many advantages. People who have brain tumors or seizure centers (epileptic foci) near functional brain tissue, whose conditions were once thought inoperable, may consider awake brain surgery to reduce complications and the risk of damage to functional brain tissue.

Awake brain surgery may help safely reduce the size of growing brain tumors, which may prolong life and improve quality of life.

As with any brain surgery, awake brain surgery has the potential for risks and complications. These include bleeding, brain swelling, infection, brain damage or death.

Other surgical complications may include seizures, muscle weakness, and problems with memory and thinking.

Before surgery, your neurosurgeon or a speech-language pathologist may ask you to identify pictures and words on cards or on a computer so that your answers can be compared during surgery.

During surgery

An anesthesia specialist (anesthesiologist) will give you some medication to make you sleepy for parts of your awake brain surgery. Your neurosurgeon will apply numbing medications to your scalp to ensure your comfort.

During the procedure, doctors place your head in a fixed position to keep your head still and ensure surgical accuracy. Some of your hair will be clipped. Your surgeon then removes part of your skull to reach your brain.

You'll be sedated and sleepy while part of your skull is removed in the beginning of the surgery, and also when doctors reattach the skull at the end of the surgery. During the surgery, your anesthesiologist will stop administering the sedative medications and allow you to wake up.

If your brain tumor or epileptic focus is close to areas of your brain that control vision, speech or movement, your doctor will conduct brain mapping. This provides your neurosurgeon with a map of the brain centers that control each of these functions. Your surgeon also can perform brain mapping deeper in your brain during surgery.

Your neurosurgeon uses this map to avoid damaging these areas and preserve these functions. Brain mapping, along with 3-D computer images, allows your surgeon to safely remove as much of your brain tumor or epileptic focus as possible and lower the risks of damaging important body functions.

During surgery, your neurosurgeon or a speech-language pathologist may ask you questions or ask you to identify pictures and words on cards or computer that you saw before surgery. Your doctor may ask you to make movements, identify pictures on cards, count numbers or raise a finger. Your responses help your surgeon identify and avoid the functional areas in your brain.

Your medical team also uses detailed 3-D computer images of your brain taken before and during your surgery, including intraoperative MRI and computer-assisted brain surgery, to guide removal of as much of the brain tumor or epilepsy focus as possible.

Your anesthesiologist and surgical team carefully monitor and assess your body and brain functions and alerts your surgeon if surgery affects brain function.

After surgery

After surgery, your surgeon may request an MRI to ensure that removal of the tumor or epileptic focus is complete.

You'll probably be in the intensive care unit for a while after surgery and spend about two to three days in the hospital.

You generally may return to work and normal activities in six weeks to three months. You'll have a follow-up appointment with your doctor about three months after surgery.