A Girl’s Miraculous Journey After a Chariot Fall
When a young girl from Huskur met with a devastating accident during the chariot procession in March 2025 , life stood still. Sitting in an auto at that moment, she suffered a very severe brain injury — a diffuse axonal injury — one of the most critical forms of head trauma.
She arrived in a deep coma, completely unresponsive. For weeks, her life hung in the balance. Through intensive critical care, ventilator support, and rehabilitation, the team worked tirelessly to bring her back. Today, she’s walking, talking, and even singing again — a living example that with timely neuro care and persistence, even the darkest days can turn into miracles.
When Vision Fades, It Might Be the Brain — Not the Eyes
A 42-year-old woman came to us after losing vision in one eye, assuming it was just an eye problem. But an MRI revealed a shocking truth — an 8×8 cm benign brain tumour pressing on her optic nerve. The culprit was deep within the brain, silently stealing her sight. We performed a craniotomy and carefully excised the tumour, releasing the pressure that had blinded her. In a few days, her vision returned — and so did her hope.
Sometimes, when the eyes fail, the problem isn’t in the eyes at all — it’s in the brain.
The Man Who Was Always Angry — Until a Tumour Was Found
A 52-year-old man from Gubbi was constantly angry, irritable, and losing his temper over the smallest things. His family thought it was due to stress or diabetes — until his vision started fading. Scans revealed something unexpected — a frontal lobe brain tumour. This part of the brain controls emotion and personality. The tumour was not only affecting his sight but also his behaviour. After a successful tumour removal surgery, his anger disappeared, his emotions stabilized, and his vision improved. He’s now calm, composed, and grateful — proving that sometimes, what looks like anger is really the brain crying for help.
From Paralysis to Power How Spine Surgery Gave a New Life
A 55-year-old man came to us almost immobile — losing strength in his hands and legs, and unable to control urination. His life was slipping away, one nerve at a time. Detailed evaluation revealed cervical spinal cord compression, a condition where the bones in the neck squeeze the spinal cord, causing paralysis and loss of control. Through a precise spinal decompression surgery, we removed the bone pressing on his spinal cord. Within days, he began to regain movement — and within weeks, he was walking, active, and fully in control again. Every step he takes today is a reminder that the right diagnosis and timely surgery can truly change lives.
Dr. Sumana B. Pallegar
MBBS, DNB (Neurosurgery), Fellowship in Epilepsy Surgery & Functional Neurosurgery
Consultant – Neurosurgeon







