In George's experience, the post surgery pain is much less than the other surgeries and the recovery is much sooner. It's nothing comparing to your jaw surgery

I wish the surgery can be scheduled soon and a successful surgery.
Lynette
Hello AmandaBonni Hess wrote:Dearest Amanda,
I am so deeply grateful that your large brain met was able to be successfully and completely resected and that you are now recovering and receiving good post-op care and pain meds in a rehab facility. It has been our experience with Brittany's brain mets that ASPS brain mets are typically encapsulated with thankfully no fingers that reach out into surrounding brain tissue. As Brittany's highly respected neurosurgeon said, " the tumors popped out like marbles". Based on our experience the post-op symtoms ("weird mind stuff") that you are experiencing are normal with brain surgery and will most likely gradually resolve as they did for Brittany who was writing everything upside down and inverted in the first few days following her brain surgery! I am concerned, frustrated, and very upset that your doctors who had been closely following you did not recognize your vision and dizziness symtoms as possible signs of a brain met given the known nature of ASPS to metastasize to the brain, and insist on you having a brain MRI rather than only a brain CT!
I have to disagree with your oncologist who told your husband that "it usually hits the brain last" which is completely inaccurate based on our personal experience with Brittany's disease and my 13+ years of observations of other patients' ASPS experiences. In Brittany's case, she developed brain mets within the first four years of her ASPS diagnosis and then continued to develop widely disseminated mets in her tibia, spine, small bowel intussuception, duodenum, and pancreas. I am telling you this not to frighten you dear Amanda, but just to make you aware of the critical importance of being very vigilant in scanning all areas of the body including the brain every three months until you have attained sustained disease stability for at least two years. Since you now unfortunately have a history of having a brain met, I would strongly recommend that you have a brain MRI every three months instead of every four months to ensure that any new brain mets are found at the smallest most treatable size. We have just now apprehensively changed to a four month brain and spinal MRI schedule for Brittany after having them every three months for the past ten years because of our concern/knowledge that brain mets can grow much faster than mets in other areas of the body and they need to be treated at the smallest possible size to ensure a successful response and outcome.
Post brain surgery targeted radiation was never recommended or done for Brittany I assume based on the fact that the mets were encapsulated, so I am wondering why it has been recommended and scheduled for you? I don't remember if Ivan had post brain-op radiation, but perhaps he or Olga can/will comment on that issue here.
I know that you need your rest dear Amanda, so I will close for now with deepest gratitude for your thoughtful sharing and for your passionate urging for everyone to be vigilant in having regular brain MRI's and NOT just brain CT's. Hopefully something positive will come from your hard earned realization of the critical importance of brain MRI's.
Please take care of you giving yourself time to recover and heal and feel the embrace of my gentle hugs, my deepest caring, my most positive thoughts, my healing wishes, my warm friendship, all my love, and continued Hope,
Bonni