| Sri Sathya Sai Institute of Higher Medical Sciences, Whitefield, inaugurated by Bhagawan on January 2001 |
Posted on: Mar 15, 2016
A Neuro Patient’s Story
The Sri Sathya Sai Institute of Higher Medical Sciences, Whitefield celebrated its 15th Anniversary in the beginning of this year. Like the other institutions set up by Bhagawan, this too has functioned ceaselessly since inception.
When one pauses to look back at the enormity of the work accomplished, it indeed makes one breathless. Over 41,000 surgeries (Cardiac and Neuro) have been performed; the number of lives saved is far greater than even that, considering the other critical non-surgical procedures performed (over 51,000 cardiac procedures alone). Imagine a person who is part of this mammoth altruistic effort; one who has seen numerous people walk out of these gates with a fresh lease of life. Seeing a life saved, receiving gratitude from families is all in a day’s work. What if the same person was to be in the receiving end of that blessing. Wouldn’t there be a resurgence of the realisation of what it is to serve in an institution that saves lives? Such is the story of Mrs. Anuradha Pai.
This story was first published in the Jan 2016 issue of 'Manohriday', the journal of Sri Sathya Sai Institute of Higher Medical Sciences, Whitefield.
The Pai family was a busy, happy family with a lot to be grateful for. Both Anuradha and her husband, Ranganath Pai, led contented, retired lives in the city of Bangalore. Their two sons were now grown up, with families of their own. On retiring from an active work life, the couple, in their sixties, chose to stay active by engaging in acts of kindness, including volunteering at Sri Sathya Sai Institute of Higher Medical Sciences, Whitefield, on a regular basis.
Mr. Ranganath Pai and Mrs. Anuradha Pai along with their beloved Swami in Bhagawan's Hospital, Bengaluru The Bolt from the Blue
“It was a period of a great test in faith,” says her husband. “I couldn’t help ask myself why this had to happen to her. She is such a gentle soul”. The Pais consulted a local physician, who suggested that they see a neurosurgeon; and so, they returned to their dear hospital, but this time as patients in the neuroscience department.
Dr. Sai Kiran, who operated on this patient says, “This was a very complex case of subarachnoid haemorrhage with multiple intracranial aneurysms arising from the internal carotid artery, a major vessel supplying blood to the brain. Drooping of the eyelid (ptosis) was due to the compression of one of the cranial nerves by a large aneurysm. Surgery for such lesions is very complex. All three aneurysms were successfully treated surgically.
With the aneurysms clipped, her life was out of danger. However her preoperative neurological deficit (ptosis) persisted. “There is a very slight chance that you will be able to open both eyelids again”, she was told by the doctors. The Pai family decided that the same Sai who brought them this far would need to take them further. “If He wished, anything was possible. We know that doctors had done the best that they could, but it is God who administers a cure. Complete recovery from the existing neurological deficit is possible only by Swami’s Grace,” Anuradha says.
In addition to following all the instructions given by the physicians, Mrs. Pai decided to put a little vibuthi on her eyelid every morning, her prayers unfailing and faith unshaken.
| Sri Sathya Sai Institute of Higher Medical Sciences, Whitefield, inaugurated by Bhagawan on January 2001 |
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