'I want to be a ballerina': Girl, 9, stuns doctors with miraculous recovery
after half her brain is removed during surgery

Daily Mail

Nine-year-old Cameron Mott had half her brain taken out during major
surgery, but it has not stopped the youngster pursuing her dreams.

Cameron has stunned doctors and her family with a miraculous recovery from
the radical surgery and now wants to become a ballerina.

The nine-year-old developed the brain disorder Rasmussen's syndrome at the
age of three, which saw the disease eat away at the right side of her brain.
 [image: Cameron Mott]

Cameron Mott stunned doctors with her miraculous recovery after half her
brain was taken out during major surgery

 [image: Cameron developed the brain disorder Rasmussen's syndrome at the
age of three, which saw the disease eat away at the right side of her brain]

Cameron developed the brain disorder Rasmussen's syndrome at the age of
three, which saw the disease eat away at the right side of her brain

This triggered violent epileptic fits and seizures, which doctors eventually
said could only be prevented by removing half of her brain.

'It was very scary, because you just can't imagine what your child will be
like after such a dramatic brain surgery,' mother Shelly Mott told Ann Curry
on NBC's Today Show.

'It just doesn't seem like they can be the same child.

'It was absolutely the right choice. And, really, for us, when we knew what
she had, and we knew that this was our only option to help her, the risk was
something that we were willing to deal with because her quality of life was
so poor.'
 [image: The disorder triggered violent epileptic fits and seizures, which
doctors eventually said could only be prevented by removing half of
Cameron's brain]

The disorder triggered violent epileptic fits and seizures, which doctors
eventually said could only be prevented by removing half of Cameron's brain

 [image: Doctors knew that removing the right side of the brain - which
controls the left side of the body - meant she would be paralysed when she
woke from surgery]

Doctors knew that removing the right side of the brain - which controls the
left side of the body - meant she would be paralysed when she woke from
surgery

Cameron has recently finished her physiotherapy and can now run and play,
with a slight limp.

The school girl also lost some of her peripheral vision.

Doctors knew that removing the right side of the brain - which controls the
left side of the body - meant she would be paralysed when she woke from
surgery.
 [image: Cameron has recently finished her physiotherapy and can now run and
play, with a slight limp]

Cameron has recently finished her physiotherapy and can now run and play,
with a slight limp

 [image: Cameron walked out of the hospital four weeks after her surgery]

The young girl now wants to be a ballerina

But they also knew that childrens' brains are capable of rewiring themselves
and taking over functions.

Cameron walked out of the hospital four weeks after her surgery.

When asked if she had any lingering effects from the surgery, Cameron said,
'No. None at all.'

Asked what her goals were, Cameron said: 'I want to be a ballerina when I
grow up.'


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