
Members of °”ÍűTV Langoneâs Department of Neurosurgery, led by Dr. John G. Golfinos, discuss the responsibility of treating the organ that makes us who we are.
Photo: °”ÍűTV Langone Staff
Itâs taken hours of painstaking workâprepping, cutting, sawing, drilling, and clampingâto get here, but John G. Golfinos, MD, has finally reached his destination: the first of two benign tumors heâll be removing from the patientâs brain. During an especially delicate part of the procedure, he shares a piece of wisdom, born of 17 years of experience as a lead surgeon, with his assisting surgeon, a seventh-year resident. âNow, when you get to this part,â he says quietly, peering through the eyepieces of a large overhead microscope, âyou have to have the courage to cut.â
The courage to cut. The phrase goes to the heart of what it means to be a neurosurgeon, and what makes neurosurgeons a breed apart. âSometimes you face a tough decision,â explains Dr. Golfinos, the Joseph Ransohoff Professor of Neurosurgery, professor of otolaryngology, and chair of the . âEither I try to remove every last bit of this tumor, or I leave some behind. Most of the time, the tumor will keep growing. But if you try to get it all, thereâs often a cost to the patient. Youâre constantly doing riskâbenefit analysis. Thatâs why you have to know the patient as well as you can. You must have a sense of what he or she would be willing to sacrifice to extend their life. Iâm amazed at how much more aggressive I was just 10 years ago. As you get older, all the complications and consequences start to weigh on you.â
Dr. Golfinos and his colleagues in the Department of Neurosurgery are ever mindful of their unique, profound responsibility: treating the organ that, more than any other, makes us who we are. âFrom the brain and the brain only,â noted Hippocrates, âarise our pleasures, joys, laughter, and jests, as well as our sorrows, pains, grief, and fears.â Chandra Sen, MD, professor of neurosurgery and director of the , speaks of âthe sacred privilegeâ of being a neurosurgeon. âWhen I first meet a patient, that person has never seen me before, yet he or she is willing to put their life in my hands. This is the weakest moment in that personâs lifeâthey are lost, helpless, scared to death. I have to treat this person very gently. I never take the risk. Itâs the patient who takes the risk. He or she must have courage. I must have conviction. Before a big case, I meditate. It gets my mind in the zone.â
That gentleness, says Dr. Sen, must carry over into the operating room (OR). âThe brain has the consistency of Jell-O. A tumor feels like a piece of meat. The nerves are like small wet noodles,â he explains. âYou must peel away the meat without disrupting the Jell-O. Along the way, you must be careful not to damage any blood vessels, which could cause a stroke, or nerves, which could cause blindness, deafness, paralysis, or other problems. To succeed, you must have a gentle touchâand the heart of a lion. Once you are done with the operation, the brain must never know you were there.â
Is it any wonder that neurosurgeons speak so reverentially of this three-pound mass of pinkish-gray tissue about the size of a cantaloupe? âThe brain is the most complex organ in the universe,â says , professor of neurosurgery and neurosurgeon-in-chief at °”ÍűTV Langoneâs Tisch Hospital. âWe still donât know which part of the brain we see with. Itâs an enduring mysteryâone of many enduring mysteries.â Dr. Golfinos puts it another way: âWe can operate on someoneâs brain while theyâre awake, take out part of it, and they can talk to us the entire time. Even though weâre actually damaging a small part of the brain, the rest of it couldnât care less.â
The marvels of the human brain donât end there, of course. An organ whose makeup is 75 percent water, it generates 100,000 chemical reactions every second and enough electrochemical energy to power a 10-watt lightbulb. The brain contains 100 billion neurons (nerve cells), each connectedâdirectly or indirectlyâto as many as 100,000 others. Twelve pairs of cranial nerves, some of which control numerous parts of the head, and 100,000 miles of blood vessels crisscross its terrain. Though pain is registered in the brain, the organ itself has no pain receptors and cannot feel pain. The brain demands 15 to 20 percent of the blood pumped from the heart. If itâs deprived of blood-borne oxygen for as little as 8 to 10 seconds, the result is unconsciousness. After 30 seconds or so, permanent brain damage may occur. In a single day, the brain gives rise to an estimated 70,000 thoughts, processing information at a rate of up to 268 miles per hour. In a lifetime, it can retain 1 quadrillion separate bits of information.
Such a precious object deserves high-level security, and the brainâs protective mechanisms are truly impressive. The bony skull, or vault, is a quarter-inch thick at the top and even thicker at the base. The meninges, three layers of membranes that line the skull, shield the brain further. The brain is suspended in cerebrospinal fluid, which functions as a shock absorber, reducing the impact of sudden blows. Isolated from the bloodstream by a bloodâbrain barrier, the brain has a dutiful gatekeeper, admitting some nourishing elements and forbidding entrance to others, notably toxins.
The challenge of penetrating this formidable fortress to reach the treasure that lies within has intrigued mankind for centuries. The first successful operations to remove tumors, however, took place only about a century ago. Until the 1970s and 1980s, when CT scans, overhead microscopes, high-intensity illumination in the OR, and microsurgical instruments became available, a neurosurgeonâs skill relied largely on his keenness of vision and steadiness of hand. While manual dexterity, handâeye coordination, spatial perception, and tactile memory (the ability to return your hand to exactly the same place it was before you moved it) will always be the hallmarks of a neurosurgeon, âgolden hands have become less and less important,â says Jeffrey H. Wisoff, MD, professor of neurosurgery and pediatrics, and director of the Division of Pediatric Neurosurgery. âBefore we had the benefit of detailed imaging, stereotactic navigation, and electrophysiological monitoring, you had to have incredible technical mastery,â he explains. âThat said, you canât be a klutz.â
Then what does separate good neurosurgeons from great ones? âThe greats have a real balance of confidence and empathy,â Dr. Golfinos says. âThe hardest thing to teach is taking ownership of the patientârealizing that this person has placed everything they have in your hands.â Dr. Sen agrees: âIf you exude a lack of confidence, your entire team senses it, and the team breaks down. If you get anxious, your hand shakes, and the situation quickly deteriorates.â For Dr. Wisoff, the key is strategy. âYou plan an operation like you plan a battle,â he says. âYou know where all the pieces lie, and youâre prepared for as many contingencies as possible.â Dr. Jafar sums it up in a single word: tenacity. âHating to lose is what makes us a breed apart. I chose neurosurgery because itâs difficult. I thrive on challenges. Iâm a bad loser.â
°”ÍűTV Langoneâs Department of Neurosurgery has never had so many winners. Dr. Golfinos has recruited several outstanding neurosurgeons, some of them world renowned for their expertise in subspecialties. The department now has 17 neurosurgeons serving patients at Tisch Hospital, Kimmel Pavilion, NYC Health + Hospitals/Bellevue, and the Manhattan campus of the VA NY Harbor Healthcare System. Its long-standing reputation for excellence encompasses surgery for brain tumors, brain aneurysms and vascular malformations, spine ailments, epileptic seizures, Parkinsonâs disease (treated with deep brain stimulation), and a range of other conditions.
âSome of our colleagues are iconic,â says Anthony K. Frempong-Boadu, MD, associate professor of neurosurgery and orthopedic surgery and director of the Division of Spinal Surgery. âWe observe each other in the OR like itâs our first time there. The intellectual exchange has upped everyoneâs game.â Dr. Jafar is so proud of his newly expanded department that he says, âIâve visited many departments of neurosurgery around the world, and few of them rival ours. Many patients are told that their tumor is inoperable, but then they come here and they survive.â
âOur goal,â Dr. Golfinos says, âis to be the place that other neurosurgery centers refer their really difficult cases to because we can get the job done.â For neurosurgeons, that often requires what Dr. Frempong-Boadu describes as âwalking the tightropeâ between confidence and hubris. âNeurosurgeons are comfortable going into the unknown,â he says. âA lot of what we do is shrouded in mystery. What makes a great neurosurgeon is their thinking. Itâs not about technical skills. Itâs about knowing what you can and canât touch, what you can and canât move. A great neurosurgeon can almost see through things.â
For all the information and insights that sophisticated imaging can provide, the map is not the same as the territory itself, and danger, if not disaster, is sometimes only a millimeter away. âYouâre often working in a surgical field the size of a quarter or half-dollar,â Dr. Wisoff explains. âIf you donât have fear,â adds Dr. Jafar, âyouâre dangerous. You can work for hours, and in the last 10 seconds, you can ruin everything. The most dangerous part of the operation is the last five minutes because you think youâre finished. You canât afford to let your guard down, even for a moment. I donât listen to music while Iâm operating. The night before, I listen to Mozart. In the OR, Iâm listening to the patientâs heart rate, one of many things that guide me.â
The importance of total concentration is just one of the lessons Dr. Jafar tries to instill in his residents, mostly by example. Unlike many programs in neurosurgery, °”ÍűTV Langone has a training period of seven years instead of six. During the last year (the second of 2 as chief resident), the newly minted neurosurgeon functions as the operating surgeon for more than 300 varied neurological procedures. Yet thereâs one thing, says Dr. Jafar, that you canât teach: judgment. âFor a neurosurgeon,â he explains, âcommon sense is knowing what your limits are. Knowing how to stay out of troubleâor get yourself out of trouble. Knowing when to stop the surgery if you have to.â
Dr. Wisoff feels that the key to mastering the art of critical thinking inside the OR is to anticipate as many pitfalls as possible and carefully consider the options outside the OR. âWhen youâre removing a malignant tumor,â he says, âyou have to be appropriately aggressive. If you go in with a timid attitude, youâll perform a timid operationâwhat we call peek and shriek. If thatâs not right for the patient, youâve done him or her a tremendous disservice.â In the still fairly uncharted landscape of the brain, doing whatâs right for the patient may be the greatest challenge of being a neurosurgeon, but itâs also the most critical. âIf Iâm not comfortable with a resident Iâve trained operating on a member of my own family,â Dr. Jafar says, âthen Iâve failed.â
For even the best neurosurgeons, the possibility of failureâbe it deficits or deathâalways looms large. âEvery one of my cases is my toughest case ever,â Dr. Sen says. âThat degree of respect keeps you from becoming cavalier.â The survival rates for benign brain tumors have increased dramatically over the years, so most of the time, notes Dr. Jafar, âthe odds are by far in favor of the patient.â In children with malignant brain tumors, explains Dr. Wisoff, the cure rates are above 80 percent. âI followed in my fatherâs footsteps,â he explains, âand he taught me that to be a neurosurgeon, you have to be an optimist. âMaybe itâs a subdural hematoma that we can drain and cure the patient,â he would say. Or âMaybe itâs a benign tumor that we can remove and cure the patient.â Or âMaybe itâs a low-grade malignancy that will allow us to buy the patient a lot of time.â Or âMaybe we canât save the patient, but we can bring better quality to their life.ââ
âSome patients have a will to live thatâs very, very strong,â Dr. Golfinos notes, âespecially if they have children or someone else to live for.â But on those rare occasions when a neurosurgeon must accept defeatâand they can recite the names of every patient theyâve ever lostâthe toll is a lingering one. âWhen my kids were young,â Dr. Wisoff recalls, âI would go home and give them a big hug. Then Iâd sit down with my wife and have a long talk.â For Dr. Sen, healing requires solitude. âWhen I have a disaster,â he says, âI go home, I sit quietly, and I have even cried.â Dr. Jafar believes that the only true measure of comfort comes from âknowing that you did your best, and that youâre at peace with yourself.â
Neurosurgeons seem to reserve their greatest optimism for their faith in nature and science. âWhen you think of the billions of cell divisions that take place between conception and delivery,â says Dr. Wisoff, âcreating the potential for our genetic code to be misinterpreted or to go awry, itâs astonishing how few problems we actually have.â Dr. Golfinos points to improved medications, endovascular techniques, technology, and other advances that have âstacked the odds in our favor.â About 50 years ago, he reminds us, âthere was only one kind of tumor that could be removed without killing the patient: a meningioma. Fifty years from now, the greatest advance will be the elimination of neurosurgery. Our specialty will probably be obsolete.â