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Oklahoma City 4-year-old's life dramatically improves after first-in-the-state surgery for frequent seizures

She has a condition that causes benign tumors, which, in turn, cause frequent seizures

Oklahoma City 4-year-old's life dramatically improves after first-in-the-state surgery for frequent seizures

She has a condition that causes benign tumors, which, in turn, cause frequent seizures

AND, A FOUR-YEAR-OLD WITH SEVERE SEIZURES IS THE FIRST CHILD IN OKLAHOMA TO HAVET. I HER STORY IS NEW AT 10:00. [LAUGHTER] JESSIC FOUR-YEAR-OLD ARIA GROOVER HAS A RARE, GENETIC DISEASE, TUBEROUS. SCLEROSIS. IT CAUSES MULTIPLE, BENIGN BRAIN TUMORS AND, IN TURN, SEVERE SEIZURES, THREE TO FIVE A DAY FOR ARIA. >> IT WAS HEARTBREAKING AND E WOULD BE HAVING MOMENTS OF SHE MIGHT BE GIGGLING AND LAHIUG AND WE ARE PLAYING WITH HER, AND ALL OF A SUDDEN SHE’D HAVE A SEIZURE AND WOULDN’T WANT TO DO ANYTHING AND GO LAY DOWN AND SLEEP. JESSICA: NOW, ARIA’S FAMILYAYS S SHE HAS MAYBE ONE SEIZURE A DAY AFTER UNDERGOING SURGERY ABOUT TWO MONTHS AGO. >> YOU CAN JUST SEE A DIFFERENCE IN HER. SH E’S MORE AWARE AND MORE ALERT. >> SHE’S DOING THINGS SHE WASN’T DOING BEFORE. IT’S AMING AZ WATCH ACTUALLY. JESSICA: ARIA’S THE FIRST CHILD IN OKLAHOMA TO HAVE WHAT’S CALLED ESTEREO EEG. DOCTORS SAY SINCE THEN NOT ONLY HAVE HER SEIZURES DECREASED IN FREQUEY, BNCUT ALSO SEVERITY. >> HER QUALITY OF LIFE HAS DRAMATICALLYMPRO ID.VE EVEN THOUGH SHE’S STILL HAVING SOME SEIZURES, THE SEIZURES SHE’S HAVING ARE NOT THE DETRIMENTAL KIND THAT SHE WAS HAVING BEFORE. OU HEALTH GAVE US THIS VIDEO FROM INSIDE THE SURGICAL RM.OO AND TALKED TO ONE OF THE DOCTORS. >> WE MAKE SOME SMALL HOLES IN DIFFERENT PARTS OF THE BRAIN AND PUT IN AN ELECTRODE NEAR ALLHE T ABNORMAL OR SUSPICIOUS PARTS OF THE BRAIN. IN A MINIMALLY INVASIVMAE NNER WE CAN ACCESS DIFFERENT PARTS OF THE BRAIN. SO THEY’RE TWO T THREE MILLIMETER INCISIONS, JUST ONE- OR TWO-MILLIMETER HOLESN I THE SKULL AND PUT THESE ELECTRODES IN. JESSICA: THE TEAM RECORDS OMFR THE SURFACE OF THE BRAIN ITSELF TO GET VERY SPECIFIC INFORMATION ABOUT WHERE EXACTLY THE SEIZURES ARE COMING FROM. DOCTORS SAY MORE THAN 90% OF THE TIME, THEY CAN FIGURE OUT WHICH PART OF THE BRAIN IS SEIZI. FOR ARIA, >> THE SEIZURES SHE WAS HAVING PREVIOUSLY HAVE COMPLETELY STOEDPP BUT SHE HAS ANOTHER SEIZURE TYPE THAT HAS EMERGED, SO IT’S POSSIBLE WITH MEDICATIONS THAT WE CAN GET THAT OTHER SEIZURE TYPE UNDER CONTRO JESSICA: ARIA’S FAMILY SAYS THEY’RE ALREADY SEEING MUCH PROGRESS, AND THEY’RE HOPEFUL SHE’LL KEEP IMPROVING. >> SHE’S STARTING TO CLAP MORE AND SHE DANCES NOW WHEN ESH HEARS MUSIC ANSTF.D SHE WILL WATCH THE TV, THE TV GRASPS HER ATTENTION MORE. >> THERE’S JUST A LOT. JUST THE TOTAL WAY SHE INTERACTS WITH YOU IS DIFFERENT. JESSICA: ARIA HAS ENBE NON-VERBAL AND ONLY STARTED TO WALK ABOUT A YEAR AGO. >> SHE’S BECONGMI MORE INDEPENDENT ON HER WALKING THOUGH, EVEN SINCE THE SURGE.RY AS FAR AS GOING OUTSIDE, SHE NEVER USED TO LIKE GOING OUTSIDE NOW, SHE DOES AND WANDERS AROUND. SHE IS DEFINITELY MORE CURIOUS OUT THERE. >> SHE ACTUALLY IS STARTING TO SAY A FEW WORDS. SHE SAID SOME WORDS PRIOR BUT THEY WERE LOA T LESS FREQUENT AND NOW SHE SAYS GO, GO, GO WHEN IT’S TIME TO .GO SHE SAYS COLD WHEN WE’RE WETTING HER HAIR BECAUSE HE HAS SUPER CURLHAY .IR >> IT’S ALMOST LIKE SHE CAN TELL THE MEINANG BEHIND IT NOW. ESPECIALLY WHEN WE SAY GO, GO SHE GOES TO OUR DOOR SHE KNO WE’RE LEAVING. JESSICA: THE GROOVER’S YSA THEY’RE ESPECIALLY THANKFUL FOR ARIA’S TEAM OF DOCTORS AT OU HEALTH. AND THIS HOLIDAY SEASON EYTH HAVE HOPE FOR HER FUTURE. >> IT ALMOST BRINGS TEARS TO MY EYES. THIS IS SOMETHING I’VE WANTED FOR HER FOR SO LONG. WE’ GVEONE THROUGH SO MYAN DOCTOR’S APPOINTMENTS. >> FROM A MOM’S POINT OF VIEW, IT 'T ’S HARD TO SEE YOUR KID AND NOT BE ABLE TO HELP HER IN AAY W THAT YOU WANT TO YOUEEL F HELPLE.SS I JUST WANT HER TO HAVE THE BEST QUALITY OF LIFE AND THAT’S WHAT WE’RE GOINGOR. >> I PRAY TO GOD EVERYIG N THAT WE CAN GET HER TO THE POINT THATHE S CAN HAVE AS M
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Oklahoma City 4-year-old's life dramatically improves after first-in-the-state surgery for frequent seizures

She has a condition that causes benign tumors, which, in turn, cause frequent seizures

A 4-year-old Oklahoma girl is the first in the state to have a life-saving surgery.Her family is extra thankful for Thanksgiving this year. Aria Groover has a rare genetic disease called tuberous sclerosis. It causes multiple benign brain tumors and severe seizures – three to five a day in Aria’s case.“It was heartbreaking. She would be having moments of, she might be giggling and laughing and playing with her and she’d have a seizure and she wouldn’t want to do anything go lie down and sleep,” said Aria’s grandmother, Dawna. Now, the girl’s family says, she has about one seizure a day, after undergoing surgery two months ago. >>Related: 4-year-old girl celebrating after completing cancer treatment at Oklahoma Children's Hospital“You can just see a difference in her. She’s more aware and more alert. She’s doing things she wasn’t doing before. It’s amazing to watch, actually,” said Aria’s mother, Megan. Aria is the first child in Oklahoma to have Estereo EEG surgery. Doctors say her seizures have decreased since then in numbers and severity.“Her quality of life has dramatically improved. Even though she’s still having some seizures, the seizures she’s having are not the detrimental kind that she was having before,” said Dr. Cherie Herren, a pediatric neurologist and epilepsy director for OU Children’s Health. OU Health gave KOCO 5 a video from inside the operating room and talked to one of the doctors. “We make some small holes in different parts of the brain and put in an electrode near all the abnormal or suspicious parts of the brain,” said Dr. Virendra Desai, director of surgical epilepsy and functional programs for OU Children’s Health. “In a minimally invasive manner, we can access different parts of the brain. So they’re 2 to 3-millimeter incisions, just 1 or 2-millimeter holes in the skull and put these electrodes in.”>>Related: How the pandemic has caused ‘bumps’ or ‘delays’ in Oklahoma children’s learning, growthThe team records from the surface of the brain itself to get very specific information about where the seizures originate. Doctors say more than 90% of the time they can figure out which part of the brain is seizing.“The seizures she was having previously have completely stopped, but she has another seizure type that has emerged, so it’s possible with medications that we can get that other seizure type under control,” Herren said.Aria’s family says they’re already seeing progress and are hopeful she’ll keep improving.“She’s starting to clap more and she dances now when she hears music and stuff. She will watch the TV – the TV grasps her attention more,” Dawna said.Said Megan: “There’s just a lot – just the total way she interacts with you is different.”Aria also has been nonverbal and only started walking about a year ago.“She's becoming more independent on her walking though even since the surgery — going outside — she never used to like going outside. Now she does and wanders around. She's more curious out there,” Dawna said.

A 4-year-old Oklahoma girl is the first in the state to have a life-saving surgery.

Her family is extra thankful for Thanksgiving this year.

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Aria Groover has a rare genetic disease called tuberous sclerosis. It causes multiple benign brain tumors and severe seizures – three to five a day in Aria’s case.

“It was heartbreaking. She would be having moments of, she might be giggling and laughing and playing with her and she’d have a seizure and she wouldn’t want to do anything go lie down and sleep,” said Aria’s grandmother, Dawna.

Now, the girl’s family says, she has about one seizure a day, after undergoing surgery two months ago.

>>Related: 4-year-old girl celebrating after completing cancer treatment at Oklahoma Children's Hospital

“You can just see a difference in her. She’s more aware and more alert. She’s doing things she wasn’t doing before. It’s amazing to watch, actually,” said Aria’s mother, Megan.

Aria is the first child in Oklahoma to have Estereo EEG surgery. Doctors say her seizures have decreased since then in numbers and severity.

“Her quality of life has dramatically improved. Even though she’s still having some seizures, the seizures she’s having are not the detrimental kind that she was having before,” said Dr. Cherie Herren, a pediatric neurologist and epilepsy director for OU Children’s Health.

OU Health gave KOCO 5 a video from inside the operating room and talked to one of the doctors.

“We make some small holes in different parts of the brain and put in an electrode near all the abnormal or suspicious parts of the brain,” said Dr. Virendra Desai, director of surgical epilepsy and functional programs for OU Children’s Health. “In a minimally invasive manner, we can access different parts of the brain. So they’re 2 to 3-millimeter incisions, just 1 or 2-millimeter holes in the skull and put these electrodes in.”

>>Related: How the pandemic has caused ‘bumps’ or ‘delays’ in Oklahoma children’s learning, growth

The team records from the surface of the brain itself to get very specific information about where the seizures originate. Doctors say more than 90% of the time they can figure out which part of the brain is seizing.

“The seizures she was having previously have completely stopped, but she has another seizure type that has emerged, so it’s possible with medications that we can get that other seizure type under control,” Herren said.

Aria’s family says they’re already seeing progress and are hopeful she’ll keep improving.

“She’s starting to clap more and she dances now when she hears music and stuff. She will watch the TV – the TV grasps her attention more,” Dawna said.

Said Megan: “There’s just a lot – just the total way she interacts with you is different.”

Aria also has been nonverbal and only started walking about a year ago.

“She's becoming more independent on her walking though even since the surgery — going outside — she never used to like going outside. Now she does and wanders around. She's more curious out there,” Dawna said.