Science
Related: About this forumChicago pianist 'grateful' to make music again after life-changing brain surgery
A hospital bed in Florida isnt Mark Burnells typical performance venue. But this spring, with an electric keyboard in his lap and 14 holes drilled into his skull, the longtime Chicago musician struck up a melody on the old ivories.
The tune was a time-honored, and fitting, classic from The Wizard of Oz: the Scarecrows seminal hit, If I Only Had a Brain.
Standing bedside, Burnells wife, Anne, sang along. I would not be just a nothin my head all full of stuffin, my heart all full of pain, she crooned. And perhaps Ill deserve you, and be even worthy of you, if I only had a brain.
Burnell, a pianist and singer who has gigged, directed and taught across Chicago since 1989, underwent brain surgery in April at a Mayo Clinic campus in Florida, after a year and a half spent managing monthly seizures. The procedure used innovative brain mapping techniques and even mid-surgery performances by Burnell himself to see through.
But ultimately, the treatment proved successful at tempering Burnells epilepsy, he and his surgical team say. Now, a few months into recovery, the Burnells on Thursday night will be staging their first large public concert since Burnells surgery.
https://www.chicagotribune.com/2025/07/31/chicago-pianist-grateful-to-make-music-again-after-life-changing-brain-surgery/
The things they can do now...

EYESORE 9001
(28,860 posts)Nothing was found after I had three concussions within a span of a few months. This was in the early 70s, and even though I got an MRI in the early 80s that didnt show anything, Id like to have another look using todays technology.
mopinko
(72,888 posts)she had a fractured skull at 5. i knew shed hit her head, but she had no symptoms that there was anything bad going on. she had headaches and sleep issues much later and saw a pediatric neurologist, who found nothing.
she was even dxd w ptsd, cuz her seizures were causing her to see ppl out of the corner of her eyes, and thought she was being followed.
it wasnt til she started having grand mal seizures that they figured it out. wired her up, and 15 min later came into the room and asked have u ever had a bad head injury?
took a while to get them under control, but they r now. funny thing- its hereditary to develop seizures from a head injury. i was 65 when i realized id had seizures for a decade after a bad head injury.
there r soooo many types of seizures. if u think u have some lasting damage, u shd look it up.
EYESORE 9001
(28,860 posts)but I sure became different after those concussions.
mopinko
(72,888 posts)i understand that the v.a. has pretty much perfected pet scans that can detect brain damage.