• @Neuromancer49@midwest.social
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    12714 days ago

    I ran a lot of MRIs for my PhD. I saw somewhere around 100-200 different brains. About 10% of them had abnormalities. Of all the technicians, scientists, and (non-clinical) doctors I spoke with, we all agreed this was a very high rate of discovery. All my friends graduated without seeing anything weird. My advisor liked to joke that I was cursed. Eventually I stopped inviting my friends to do my experiments because I didn’t want to deal with the risk of them having an abnormality - thanks to some combination of HIPAA and medical liability laws, I wasn’t allowed to say anything about it, even if asked point blank. I didn’t like that very much.

    I made one exception, as a friend of mine came in for a study and I saw a golf ball sized cyst in his sinus. He had it surgically removed and he told me he stopped snoring the next day. It felt good to make a difference for him.

    But, I saw one brain similar to the one documented here. It belongs to one of my close friends. It was harrowing. Entire left hemisphere was malformed, the ventricles were way too big and the cortex was way too thin. But the right side of his brain was underdeveloped, maybe the size of a tennis ball.

    The weirdest part, he is 100% normal. In fact, he competed at a high level of college athletics. Normal Cognition, normal motor function, great sense of humor, and a very caring person. Now he has a great job, wife and kid, and we hang out often. But I can’t bring myself to say anything, and every time I see his son I wonder about his brain.

    • @SacralPlexus@lemmy.world
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      1613 days ago

      I’m a Neuroradiologist and occasionally people ask me “Have you ever scanned your own brain?” when they find out my profession.

      Abso-fucking-lutely not. I’ve seen how many people have random abnormalities that are unknown until discovered incidentally when having an unrelated problem evaluated. Finding something abnormal in my brain would no doubt keep me up at night even if it was something medically considered unimportant. No way I’m going to scan myself just for fun.

    • @ddash@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      3414 days ago

      I can just imagine you at their garden party, sweating, while your friend brags how their son is doing so well at school but seems to just not understand some really mundane topic.

    • @Ajen@sh.itjust.works
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      614 days ago

      I’m curious, what exactly are you worried about with your friend? Are the abnormalities you saw linked to a treatable disease?

      • @Neuromancer49@midwest.social
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        1414 days ago

        Nope, not related to any disease I’ve ever seen. The best guess i have is fetal alcohol syndrome but it isn’t a perfect match. It’s just weird knowing he has a very odd shaped brain. And there’s a lot of unknowns surrounding it.

        What if he sees another doctor and they mention it to him? Would he be upset I didn’t say anything? What if it is linked to some disease and I didn’t tell him, and he gets sick?

        What if it’s hereditary and his kid has it, does it explain the motor delays? The premature birth? The problems they have with him sleeping?

        Just a lot of unknowns.

        • @NoSpotOfGround@lemmy.world
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          714 days ago

          Could you tell him just “you should have another MRI at a clinic”?

          That rule does not seem very ethical to me, in any case.

        • @Ajen@sh.itjust.works
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          714 days ago

          Personally, if I had something like that, that wasn’t causing me problems and wasn’t linked to future problems, I wouldn’t want to know. Especially because of how unknown it is. It sounds like there’s no way that information could be of use to anyone other than a researcher, so it actually seems right that you can’t share it.

          On the other hand, I’m glad your other friend got their sinus checked out.

    • @toynbee@lemmy.world
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      112 days ago

      My advisor liked to joke that I was cursed.

      It didn’t have quite the same level of personal impact, but I used to associate with a geologist who said something similar about me and geodes.

    • @Jordan117@lemmy.world
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      614 days ago

      I think I read that brains like these are basically normal in terms of structure and number of neurons, just compressed by the extra fluid pressure.

    • @Lemming6969@lemmy.world
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      714 days ago

      He’s not 100% normal, you just haven’t experienced the things he cannot process properly or at all, which is likely a lot of higher reasoning… They just don’t affect his day to day, which gives us clues that day to day functioning is very low level and likely mostly autonomous.

      • @Neuromancer49@midwest.social
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        1814 days ago

        Eh, college is hard and so was his sport. Sure, it’s not an exhaustive battery of testing but I’m confident to say he’s a normal dude.

  • @Elaine@lemm.ee
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    2614 days ago

    When I got an MRI I learned I have some empty spaces in my brain that normally close during infancy. I was there because my family has a genetic marker for cavernous venous malformations primarily in the brain. Luckily it doesn’t affect our intelligence, we just “die of headaches”.

    • @Kusimulkku@lemm.ee
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      313 days ago

      Every time this is mentioned I get the biggest chuckle out of him being a French civil servant.

      Explains why it went unnoticed.

  • @yesman@lemmy.world
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    814 days ago

    If we could just let go of the Yakubian myth that more brains = smarter, this wouldn’t be so surprising.

  • JackFrostNCola
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    513 days ago

    Weird, you can just make out letters in one angle, i see a M and G… Was the subject wearing a hat during the scan?