Picture of author.
3 Works 238 Membros 15 Críticas

About the Author

Image credit: reading at 2018 Gaithersburg Book Festival By Slowking4 - Own work, GFDL 1.2, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=69292436

Obras por Barbara K. Lipska Ph. D

Etiquetado

Conhecimento Comum

Sexo
female
Ocupações
neuroscientist

Membros

Críticas

How could her family not insist she get better treatment? I get she was secretive about symptoms and would have been difficult to persuade. But to ignore incontinence and weird behavior?
 
Assinalado
cathy.lemann | 14 outras críticas | Mar 21, 2023 |
This was an interesting book about how frontal lobe damage can affect a person's personality. It was a really fascinating story. The only thing that bugged me a little, and the author did address this, was how lucky she was to be someone with so many ins to the medical system. Her children and sister all work in the medical profession and she herself is a neuroscientist, so she had so much more access than normal to doctors and second opinions and the best hospitals. Not to mention that she's also white and wealthy which means even if she didn't have so much access she would still get better health care than a poor person of colour. It's a great story if you're interested in how the brain works and what happens when it doesn't, and it's amazing that the author survived and was able to write this book but it's also very sad to think about how this would have worked out for a different person.… (mais)
 
Assinalado
katebrarian | 14 outras críticas | Jan 3, 2022 |
This is a story about a woman and her family who went through hell and back, also know as cancer. She is a survivor. She is a mother, sister, wife, daughter, grandmother, scientist and researcher are a few more of her titles. This is not an easy story to read, but it gives hope and information about what it is like to be in that mind, to lose it and work on regaining it back.
 
Assinalado
RavinScarface | 14 outras críticas | Dec 13, 2020 |
Barbara Lipska is a remarkable scientist with an appalling story that's ultimately inspiring. Within the decade, she survived breast cancer and thereafter a melanoma on her neck. Despite debilitating treatments, she continued to work. Too, she kept fit by running (marathons), cycling, and swimming; in her early 60s, she was preparing to compete in an ironman triathlon.

On the cusp of important scientific confab at a resort in Montana in 2015, she experienced vision impairment and an MRI revealed three tumors on her brain, one of which was bleeding. A brain tumor that bleeds is usually melanoma, and melanoma in the brain is usually a death sentence.

What followed for Dr. Lipska and her family was an often dispiriting trek through a labyrinth of clinics, medical offices, and hospitals, and prognostication sessions with her family doctor, an ophthalmologist, neurosurgeons, radiation oncologists. She consulted doctors in Washington, then in Boston, where her sister Maria is a physicist in the oncologic radiation department of Brigham and Women's Hospital. In Washington, the doctors were intent on doing radiation treatments, followed by surgery. The Boston doctors favored surgery first, with radiation after. She chose the latter sequence, and when surgery removed the bleeding tumor, the vision impairment disappeared. She was accepted into an immunotherapy trial; that trial concluded, follow-up MRIs showed new tumors and significant brain swelling.

An alarming aspect of her illness manifested itself to her family and co-workers though she remained unaware of it. She became testy, angry, hypercritical, demanding. Small issues obsessed her; she'd complain about them for days. She got lost in familiar environments (her own neighborhood, for example) and forgot how to do everyday tasks, like using her cell phone. These are symptoms of mental illnesses.

Here's the twist: Dr. Barbara Lipska is in charge of the Human Brain Collection Core at the National Institute of Mental Health, and has spent her professional career studying the relationships between brain tissue and mental illness. Ironically, her tumors and treatments to eradicate them were pushing her into madness. Those around her were acutely aware of the symptoms; she herself was not.

An excellent book. Both thumbs up!
… (mais)
 
Assinalado
weird_O | 14 outras críticas | Feb 6, 2020 |

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Estatísticas

Obras
3
Membros
238
Popularidade
#95,270
Avaliação
½ 3.5
Críticas
15
ISBN
8
Línguas
1

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