Skull-base
surgery team weaves tapestry of survival
(continued)
"While
not common even in some of the nation's highly specialized academic
medical centers, skull-base surgery teams like this one represent
the most effective way we know to pro- vide the best quality of
care for patients with very complicated and difficult problems,"
said head and neck surgeon and otolaryngologist Paul Donald, professor
and director of the UC Davis Center for Skull-Base Surgery.
In
place since 1990, the skull-base team at UC Davis was a god-send
for native Sacra- mentan JoAnn Cabral. Like many residents of California's
verdant Central Valley, this 61-year-old had suffered allergies
most of her life. Sinus infections, an alternately drippy and clogged
nose, watery eyes and headaches came and went with regularity.
But
in the late summer of 1997 her symptoms acquired a new twist: numbness
on the right side of her nose extending up to her eye.
A
visit to her allergist con-firmed yet another sinus infection. But
this time even three back-to-back courses of heavy-duty, wide-spectrum
antibiotics didn't provide relief. On Sept. 26, as she showered
and prepared to head for her office, where she worked as an assistant
vice president for the Bank of America, an excruciating pain set
in over her right eye. By the next morning her eyelid was drooping,
and she was seeing double.
"I
had never had a serious illness in my entire life," Cabral
recalled. "But I knew something was dreadfully wrong."
Photo
right: JoAnn Cabral of Sacramento credits head and neck surgeon
Paul Donald with saving her life.
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