Thursday, July 18, 2019
Colloid Cysts, Physical and Personal Impacts on Patient and Spouse :: Medical Medicine Papers
Colloid Cysts, Physical and Personal Impacts on Patient and Spouse      Introduction:    The patient is a 45 year old male who was in a car accident that   involved alcohol on July 29, 2004.    I have known the patient   for three years and will be referring to aspects of the patient   that I know to be true, but am unable to cite  all details due   to learning them via the dynamics of the relationship.  The   patient and the patientsââ¬â¢ spouse have requested complete   anonymity for the purpose of this paper.  The car accident   resulted in a series of injuries for the patient which were a   fractured pelvis, a lacerated bladder, internal organ bruising,   a moderate concussion, and sciatic nerve palsy (nerve damage).    The moderate concussion was determined by a computerized axial   tomography (CAT) scan which also showed the colloid cyst.  The   patient believes he was made aware of the cyst; however his   memories are not absolute and the spouse was not made aware at   the same time.  The cyst was mentioned (again) at the end of   September and the brain surgery happened on February 13, 2005,   six and a half months later.  This series of interviews has   occurred during the two months after the surgery. (Patient,   Patient Spouse, personal communication, April, 27, 2005)    Symptoms:    The patient was suffering from intense dizzy spells for a year   prior to the car accident. The patient is a licensed   chiropractor and as he put it, ââ¬Å"Doctors make the worst   patientsâ⬠, so he rationalized the dizziness and never expressed   a need or desire to medically investigate it.  The patient had   not been experiencing the most common symptom, a headache.    (Patient, Patient Spouse, personal communication, April 28,   2005)  In the literature about colloid cysts there is a high   prevalence of symptomatic headaches in the patients, often it is   the headaches the patients are trying to resolve when the   colloid cyst is discovered. (www.healthcentral.com/encyclopedia)    The car accident fractured the patientââ¬â¢s pelvis so the treating   physicians rebuilt his pelvis and began physical therapy before   they scheduled the colloid cyst surgery.  It was at this time   the patients spouse learned about the cyst; it had been two   months since its discovery.  After becoming aware of the cyst,   the patient presented with mild headaches.  (Patient Spouse,   personal communication, April 28, 2005)    Surgery:    The surgery occurred six and a half months after the CAT scan.  					    
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