Second diagnosis, second chance
After being told he had an inoperable brain tumor, Air Force veteran Tyler Nuttle sought a second opinion at the University of Cincinnati Gardner Neuroscience Institute.
“I thought that surgery was feasible,” Norberto Andaluz, MD, professor and director of skull base neurosurgery in the Department of Neurosurgery in UC's College of Medicine and a neurosurgeon at the UC Gardner Neuroscience Institute, said.
“I couldn’t believe it,” Nuttle told Lake Charles, Louisiana television station KPLC.
Andaluz said the tumor was located in the center of the brainstem related to hearing, facial movements, facial sensation and coordinated eye view, so he continuously monitored brain pathways and nerves that move the face, impact hearing and help you swallow during the surgery.
The surgery was a success, and Nuttle is expected to make a full recovery.
“Just getting back to being able to run, jump with my kid. That’s what I look forward to the most. Absolutely,” he said.
Featured photo at top of Andaluz in surgery. Photo/University of Cincinnati.
Latest UC News
- Plan ahead for UC Homecoming activitiesUniversity of Cincinnati Homecoming activities on Saturday, Oct. 19, will feature the annual Homecoming Parade around campus starting at 8 a.m. and the football game versus Arizona State University at noon in UC’s Historic Nippert Stadium.
- How to raise money for your startupOne of entrepreneurs’ toughest jobs is finding early-stage funding for their startups. We’ll offer tips on how to get your business funded.
- UC Law to host program examining death penalty, wrongful convictionCincinnati Law will host a program examining the impact of the death penalty and the politics of innocence.
- UC course turns students into digital archivistsEmma Hynes went through undergraduate school planning on becoming a professor. As far as Hynes was aware, that was one of the only jobs pursuable with a history degree. While the prospect of teaching was interesting, it wasn’t until Hynes took Intro to Public History with Rebecca Wingo that different visions of future careers really began to blossom. Over the course of the semester with Wingo, Hynes and other students participated in Public History in the Wild—a project that allows students to conduct hands-on archival work with historical sites they encounter in everyday life.
- Transforming Mobility: NEXT Innovation Scholars Win Future of Mobility + AI Design ChallengeIn a groundbreaking two-week sprint, a team of four NEXT Innovation Scholars from the University of Cincinnati triumphed in the Future of Mobility + AI: A Design Challenge, a collaborative event hosted by UC College of Design, Architecture, Art, and Planning (DAAP), the MIT Media Lab, the City Science Lab, Hyundai America Technical Center, and UC Digital Futures.
- UC Clermont sets ambitious growth plan with 5,500-student targetDean Jeff Bauer talks to Cincinnati Business Courier about college's future among growing eastern Cincinnati corridor.