Are you okay?鈥 the fourth-grader asked his math teacher. Lauren Barbosa, 39, wasn鈥檛 so sure. She was about to start a remote class one day in November, 2020, when she instantly lost her ability to speak.
鈥淚 knew what I wanted to say and my lips were moving, but I just couldn鈥檛 get anything out,鈥 Barbosa recalls. 鈥淎nd I鈥檓 never at a loss for words.鈥 Not wanting to alarm her students, she ended the session and ran to the bathroom mirror. A couple of minutes later, she was finally able to say the words she had been struggling to utter: 鈥淚 can multiply and divide whole numbers.鈥
Despite having no other symptoms, Barbosa feared a stroke. Her husband, Leonardo, brought her to the Emergency Department at 秘密研究所 Langone Hospital鈥擫ong Island, a short drive from where they were then living in Westbury, New York. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a great hospital and I knew they would take good care of me,鈥 she says. 鈥淚t鈥檚 where I was born, where my son, Dylan, was born, and where my husband once worked as a patient transport attendant.鈥
Brain scans ruled out a stroke, but revealed a suspicious lesion. Several days later, Barbosa met with Lee Tessler, MD, chief of neurosurgery at 秘密研究所 Langone Hospital鈥擫ong Island. The hospital鈥檚 neurosurgery program, part of Perlmutter Cancer Center, is ranked number one on Long Island by U.S. News & World Report, and its doctors perform over 1,200 related procedures each year.
鈥淒r. Tessler made me feel comfortable right away,鈥 says Barbosa. 鈥淗e said, 鈥楧on鈥檛 worry, whatever this is, we鈥檙e going to take care of it.鈥欌 Dr. Tessler told Barbosa that the episode was most likely caused by a seizure, so he prescribed an anti-seizure medication and asked her not to drive. He also ordered a lumbar puncture to check her cerebrospinal fluid for signs of infection and additional scans to rule out metastasis from another part of her body.
鈥淏y seeing the areas that control speech preoperatively, I was able to find a natural fold in the tissue that led almost directly to the tumor. During surgery, I would incorporate that data into our 3-D navigation system so that I could operate without causing permanent injury.鈥
鈥擠r. Lee Tessler, Neurosurgeon at Perlmutter Cancer Center
When all the test results came back negative, Dr. Tessler narrowed down the potential diagnosis to a primary brain tumor. He suspected an astrocytoma, named for the star-shaped cells where such tumors originate鈥攃ells that 鈥渃lean out debris in the brain,鈥 as Dr. Tessler puts it.
The most common type of brain tumor in adults, astrocytomas affect some 15,000 Americans each year. Unlike discrete solid tumors, they infiltrate healthy brain tissue as cancerous cells spread in between normal cells. Barbosa鈥檚 tumor was located in the left parietal lobe, which controls language and speech.
鈥淭his is one of the more challenging parts of the brain to operate on,鈥 notes Dr. Tessler. There are two important eloquent areas of the brain related to speech. One allows you to speak and another allows you to understand speech. They鈥檙e connected by a fiber tract, and that鈥檚 where Barbosa鈥檚 tumor was situated.
鈥淒amage to this part of the brain is a very devastating injury,鈥 says Dr. Tessler. 鈥淭he person could speak, but their words wouldn鈥檛 make any sense because they wouldn鈥檛 know what they were saying, even though they would think they knew what they were saying.鈥
Barbosa鈥檚 tumor was about the width of a dime鈥攂ig enough to trigger a seizure. 鈥淲hile we caught the tumor early due to Lauren鈥檚 episode of speechlessness,鈥 says Dr. Tessler, 鈥渋t was in a deeper part of the brain that鈥檚 more difficult to access without damaging tissue.鈥
To frame his battle plan, Dr. Tessler used an imaging technology called magnetic resonance (MR) tractography, which enables the surgeon to visualize functional areas of the brain and their corresponding fiber tracts. 鈥淏y seeing the areas that control speech preoperatively, I was able to find a natural fold in the tissue that led almost directly to the tumor,鈥 Dr. Tessler explains. 鈥淒uring surgery, I would incorporate that data into our 3-D navigation system so that I could operate without causing permanent injury.鈥
Dr. Tessler explained to Barbosa that he would need to perform a procedure known as an awake craniotomy, which was scheduled for December 21. 鈥淗e said, 鈥榃e鈥檙e going to do this while you鈥檙e awake,鈥欌 she recalls. 鈥淚 looked at him and said, 鈥楢re you kidding?鈥欌
With speech, he explained to Barbosa, the only way to test brain function is with the patient awake. 鈥淚f I probe an area and you stop speaking, or stop being able to name things or identify pictures, I avoid that area,鈥 Dr. Tessler told her. 鈥淚 use this feedback to fine-tune how to get to the tumor and what to remove.鈥 Dr. Tessler reassured Barbosa that the brain itself doesn鈥檛 feel pain, and nerve blocks are used to numb the scalp.
Just before Barbosa was sedated, Dr. Tessler informed her that it was the birthday of the neuropsychologist who would be asking her questions during the procedure. 鈥淲hen you become alert,鈥 Dr. Tessler said to her, 鈥淚t would be great if you would wish him a happy birthday.鈥 Barbosa did one better. She launched into the 鈥淗appy Birthday鈥 song, drawing laughter from the operating room team. 鈥淲e want the patient relaxed,鈥 explains Dr. Tessler. 鈥淏ut it was incredible that Lauren could do that.鈥 On the morning of December 23, Dr. Tessler gave Barbosa two pieces of good news: the surgery went well and she would be home before Christmas Eve.
After surgery, it took several months for her speech to return to normal, but today, with no permanent deficits, Barbosa is back at school, teaching on a full schedule. At a recent follow-up visit, she asked Dr. Tessler if she could ride a roller coaster or go zip lining. 鈥淵our scans look amazing,鈥 he replied. 鈥淕o for it.鈥 Barbosa has no plans for either activity. 鈥淚 just wanted to make sure that I could do anything again,鈥 she says. 鈥淎nd I definitely can.鈥