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by tobz 3259 days ago
Nice username... :)

It's totally logical, but wildly scary sounding. Is there any sort of anesthesia that is delivered which... I don't know... changes your perception as the patient to not think about the fact someone is poking your brain?

Clearly they can eliminate the local feeling of the surgery, but how do you stop people from freakinggggggg out that it's happening? :P

3 comments

Lots of talking and mental preparation beforehand. My father had surgery for glioblastoma (brain cancer), he had to stay awake and count so the surgeon knew he didn't remove anything important.
>Clearly they can eliminate the local feeling of the surgery

They don't really do this, your brain has no pain receptors so you can't feel what they are doing by default. I do not think they would use any sort of drug to stop people from freaking out as well, because they would imply that the drug is messing with your brain chemistry in some way which can cloud any problems they are trying to notice.

The whole idea behind the awake brain surgery is to quickly notice any changes in cognitive function from the person being operated on.

I sure hope they apply some local anesthesia so you don't have to feel them saw open your skull. Of course the brain itself doesn't have pain receptors, but the surrounding skin does.
A tremendous amount of trust is certainly involved. The brain itself doesn't actually have any pain receptors!