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November 20, 2006 -- Over the years I have heard from
many patients frustrated at their experiences with neurologists. I
have heard tales of people being told that "Chiari is nothing to worry
about", "you were born that way", "there's nothing you can do about it
anyway", and the ever popular, "your symptoms aren't real, you're depressed
and crazy".
This is not to pick on neurologists, or malign or
disparage their profession. I am quite confident there are many, many
neurologists who are kind, dedicated, compassionate, and actually know what
to do with Chiari. However, it is hard to deny that in general, many
neurologists take a different view of Chiari than do neurosurgeons.
This can be for a couple of reasons. First and
foremost, Chiari is a structural problem for which the only real current
treatment option is surgery. Since a neurologist is not going to
perform surgery, they naturally have a different view of it than a surgeon
would.
Secondly, neurologists (unless they are working closely
with a neurosurgeon which is the case at some places that specialize in
Chiari) don't necessarily have direct clinical knowledge of patient outcomes
associated with surgery. If they refer someone to a neurosurgeon, they
may never see that patient again. If they treat the patient medically,
obviously they never will know if surgery would have helped. Because
of this, they don't develop a direct knowledge of which types of cases are
likely to respond to surgery and which aren't. Rather, they tend to rely on
the standard radiographic definition of Chiari (>3mm-5mm on MRI), when we
all know that there are people with smaller herniations who have severe
symptoms.
Finally, most of the research being done on Chiari is
being performed by neurosurgeons. Consequently, the associated medical
publications relating to Chiari tend to be in the neurosurgical journals,
which neurologists may not follow. Thus, they may not be as familiar
with the latest research and thinking on the subject.
This is why, even though I am sure most neurologists
are wonderful doctors and people, that when someone tells me they have seen
a neurologist and aren't satisfied with their care, I advise them to
consider seeing a neurosurgeon instead. While hopefully the day will
come when surgery is not the main option in treating Chiari, until that day
arrives neurosurgeons will likely be the best place to go for patients.
This whole thing really hit home with me a couple of
weeks ago. I was graciously invited by one of our scientific advisors,
a neurosurgeon, to attend a talk he was giving on Chiari. When I
arrived I ended up sitting next to a neurologist. Before he knew who I
was he made a comment like, what are we here for, Chiari? Is that that
little brain thing related to chronic fatigue? I never know what to do
with those. His tone and body language said it all. He didn't
take Chiari seriously unless there was a major herniation with crippling
symptoms. I introduced myself, told him what I do, and asked him to
keep an open mind during the talk.
The neurosurgeon gave a great talk, combining a concise
overview of the Chiari literature with his own experiences. When it
was over, both the surgeon and the neurologist ended up at my table and
began conversing. At the end of the meeting, it was clear the
neurologist had changed his mind and told the surgeon he would be sending
him Chiari patients (he estimated 6-12 a year) for evaluation.
With thousands of neurologists in the US alone, the
task may seem monumental, but on this day at least one more was educated on
Chiari. And until we can raise our profile maybe that's the key, just
take it one doctor at a time.
-- Rick Labuda
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