The Show Must Go On: A Rathke Cleft Cyst Story

This patient story was originally published by聽.

It was the best 18th birthday present Sabrina Garguilo could have asked for. The New Jersey teen celebrated her big day by walking out the doors of NewYork-Presbyterian/Weill Cornell Medical Center, finally free from debilitating headaches. The pain had placed her life on hold, becoming unbearable during her senior year of high school, and the cause of the headaches had confounded doctors and specialists alike, for years. Sabrina was more than ready to return to school, where she was helping manage her high school鈥檚 spring musical, Cabaret.

鈥淚 had had headaches since I was in the seventh grade,鈥 says Sabrina. 鈥淏ut things got worse my senior year. Tylenol and ibuprofen stopped helping. I started experiencing nausea and dizziness, which made everything I had to do more difficult: applying to colleges, hanging out with friends, and making sure my grades stayed afloat.鈥

Sabrina says some days she had bad headaches, and other days she had really bad headaches. 鈥淲hen those happened, the pain was a level 10 out of 10,鈥 she says. 鈥淚t felt as if someone had bashed my head against concrete.鈥 After multiple episodes, Sabrina鈥檚 mother, AnneMarie, took her to a neurologist, who ordered an MRI, which revealed a cyst. The specialist downplayed the cyst and said it was not the cause of the headaches.

鈥淪abrina had a聽聽鈥 a fluid-filled mass that forms in a small space at the base of the brain,鈥 says聽, a 五月天视频 neurosurgeon who specializes in lesions of the skull base. 鈥淭he current ideology among neurologists is that removing the cyst doesn鈥檛 help relieve headaches. That can lead to detours in the search for treatment, as Sabrina experienced.鈥

Most Rathke cleft cysts are discovered on a scan done to find the source of a headache. 鈥淵ou would think, 鈥楶roblem solved 鈥 there鈥檚 the abnormality, that has to be it,鈥欌 says Dr. Schwartz. Not everyone agrees, however. (Dr. Schwartz and his team recently published a paper, 鈥,鈥 showing that endoscopic draining of the cyst provides lasting relief for patients with intractable headaches.)

Sabrina Garguilo found relief from her headaches at 五月天视频

鈥淭he neurologist was adamant that the cyst wasn鈥檛 causing Sabrina鈥檚 headaches,鈥 recalls AnneMarie. 鈥淭hey prescribed a pill regimen to get ahead of the pain: ibuprofen every four hours with Tylenol every two hours. Add in 100 ounces of water with 60 ounces of electrolytes daily. And when her headaches got worse, they prescribed amitriptyline, which is typically used to treat migraines and tension headaches. But the headaches kept coming. We were told that she hadn鈥檛 been taking the medication long enough 鈥 that she should stick with it until she was up to the prescribed dose. But another bad 鈥10 out of 10鈥 headache brought us back to the ER. The migraine cocktail they gave her reacted strongly with the amitriptyline, and it resulted in a really bad experience for Sabrina.鈥

鈥淚 didn鈥檛 like how this stuff was making me feel,鈥 says Sabrina. 鈥淚 just didn鈥檛 want to take it anymore. I鈥檇 read that amitriptyline was a difficult drug to taper off of if you鈥檙e taking it for a while. They suggested I take steroids, which I鈥檇 already tried back in October. The doctors I talked to were all dismissive, until we talked to聽, a neuroendocrinologist at 五月天视频. She had us do bloodwork, which showed a high prolactin level. I鈥檇 had those results before, but until that point no one had found that concerning. Thankfully, Dr. Dobri did, and that鈥檚 when she set up a meeting with Dr. Schwartz.鈥

Dr. Dobri and Dr. Schwartz work as a team caring for patients with problems of the neuroendocrine system. The聽聽provides integrated, comprehensive care for patients with disorders of the pituitary and gland, which is what Dr. Dobri recognized when she saw the blood test results.

鈥淓levated prolactin is a symptom that something鈥檚 not right,鈥 says Dr. Schwartz. 鈥淪abrina鈥檚 cyst was small, and many doctors believed that its size disqualified it from causing her headaches. But this is my specialty. I鈥檝e seen cysts bigger and smaller than hers, and what they all have in common is that as they grow, they compress the pituitary stalk and cause the elevated prolactin. I鈥檇 seen it before and recently wrote聽. So while her doctors sought to manage the symptoms, we sought to treat the problem at its root.鈥

鈥淚n that meeting, Dr. Schwartz was the only one who paid attention to my symptoms and wasn鈥檛 just looking at the size of the cyst,鈥 recalls Sabrina. Her mother agreed. 鈥淭hese headaches were destroying her mentally and physically. When he said, 鈥業 think I can help you,鈥 just the possibility of it made me cry. It was a miracle.鈥

Sabrina felt hopeful after her meeting with Dr. Schwartz, but she had already scheduled a meeting with a renowned neurosurgeon at a well-known hospital three days later. 鈥淚 treated it as a second opinion,鈥 she says. 鈥淏ut when we got there, the doctor immediately expressed his doubts 鈥 that the cyst was too small to cause problems. He didn鈥檛 ask any questions. We hadn鈥檛 submitted any tests in advance. We were talking and he wasn鈥檛 paying any attention at all. He just said the surgery was a bad idea and brought up stronger medications I could take.鈥

Sabrina and her family carefully weighed how to move forward: have the surgery with Dr. Schwartz, or continue trying new medications? Sabrina did her own research. 鈥淚 looked at symptoms for Rathke cleft cyst and it matched all the symptoms I had,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 looked at my quality of life. I could barely hang with my friends anymore, I鈥檇 wake up with a headache that wouldn鈥檛 go away, and I was taking medications that made me feel terrible. I was leaning toward surgery, but I thought, 鈥榃hat if this is a mistake?鈥 I turned to my cousin, who had actually had surgery for Chiari at Weill Cornell. She had renowned surgeons telling her not to go through with it, but she did. Her experience showed me that doctors could have such varied opinions and still be wrong about how to proceed.鈥

Two weeks later, Sabrina and her family were checking in at the Helmsley Medical Tower next to NewYork-Presbyterian/Weill Cornell Medical Center. 鈥淚 had packed a bunch of stuff to do after the surgery, but I didn鈥檛 use any of it,鈥 Sabrina laughs. 鈥淓verything felt so organized when I was getting ready for surgery. I remember Allison taking me to get an MRI done so Dr. Schwartz could have a brain map for the surgery. Soon I was on the operating table and I started tearing up. I thought, 鈥業 can鈥檛 do this,鈥 even though I was literally doing nothing. My parents were with me and, through the oxygen mask, I said 鈥業 love you guys.鈥 I heard them say 鈥業 love you鈥 back, and that was the last thing I remembered before the anesthesia hit.鈥

鈥淪urgery for Rathke cleft cyst can be done using a minimally invasive approach,鈥 says Dr. Schwartz. 鈥淲e don鈥檛 open up the skull or do anything destructive to access the cyst. We started by threading a specialized endoscope up Sabrina鈥檚 nasal cavities and routing it towards the cyst. From there, the tools on the endoscope allowed us to drain the cyst and relieve the compression in the pituitary stalk area. As you can imagine, zero incisions or disfigurements means the patient benefits from a faster recovery time, which meant Sabrina could celebrate her birthday by going home instead of being confined to a hospital bed. Most importantly this would give her ample time to recover to help manage the March debut of her final high school play.鈥

鈥淚t was like I was out for 30 seconds,鈥 recalls Sabrina. 鈥淚 wasn鈥檛 even in pain from the surgery; it was more nausea than anything. The day I was set to be released, Dr. Schwartz came by and asked how the headaches were. I was happy to say they were gone. I feel great, and my symptoms are feeling better. I still have dizziness and congestion, but with each passing day my nose gets more cleared up. I鈥檓 able to walk more. I鈥檓 getting up all by myself. I feel reborn. And you can literally tell each day that I get better. I鈥檓 so grateful.鈥

Just a week after her surgery, Sabrina was raring to go back to school and get back into the swing of things: college applications, hanging out with her friends, and assisting with Cabaret.

Sabrina has advice for anyone who feels unheard. 鈥淭rust yourself,鈥 she says. 鈥淵ou know yourself and your symptoms better than anyone else. You can explain to others as much as you can, but if you know, you know. Even with the medicine I was taking, I had a feeling I shouldn鈥檛 have been taking it 鈥 it did nothing for me. You just have to trust yourself and you have to have hope. Believe that things will get better.鈥