Kendra Jackson headed to her checkup appointment at Nebraska Medicine. She said the team at the center changed her life.
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"Everywhere I went I always had a box of Puffs," she said. "Always stuffed in my pocket."
It all started with a runny nose that wouldn't stop. In 2013, Jackson suffered head trauma in a car accident. But doctors kept telling her the runny nose was probably allergies.
"I knew something was wrong," she said. "I knew it."
At Nebraska Medicine, she was diagnosed with a CSF leak, which stands for cerebral spinal fluid. Brain fluid was leaking through her nose, about half a pint a day, and it was impacting her life.
"I couldn't sleep," she said. "I was like a zombie. I was up all night."
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If left untreated, brain fluid leaks can lead to serious infections. In the past, specialists would have to perform brain surgery to fix them - but not anymore.
"We do kind of a minimally invasive approach, where we go through the nostrils, through the nose," Dr. Christine Barnes said. "It's very similar to what we use in the OR to repair the leak."
One week after the operation, Jackson said she felt amazing.
"I could tell a great big difference," she said. "A great big difference."
Jackson will have a few more checkups to monitor the pressure in her head, but she expects she'll make a full recovery.
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