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✔️ Sixth Cranial Nerve (Abducens) Palsy — Post–Brain Tumor Surgery
49F
Post-op VI nerve paralysis after tumor resection
Prior therapies: steroids, syntonics, microcurrent — no improvement
Full restoration of eye movement and alignment
Sixth Cranial Nerve Paralysis After Brain Surgery
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Quick Facts
- Patient: 49-year-old female
- Condition: Sixth cranial nerve paralysis with constant diplopia after brain surgery
- Context: Post-surgical nerve injury from right-sided brain tumor removal. Severe eye turn with constant double vision. Unable to move affected eye laterally. Visual field defect and enlarged blind spot in affected eye. Planned surgical muscle reattachment as next step in conventional care.
- Protocol: Began coMra treatment after several weeks of unsuccessful therapy with syntonics and microcurrent. 12 treatments over ~1 month. coMra Delta 905 used. Eye Protocol + 5 minutes at surgery site.
- Outcome Highlights: Full ocular alignment and motion restored. Visual acuity improved to 20/20. Visual field normalized. Diplopia resolved. Avoided surgical muscle reattachment. Returned to work in entertainment industry.
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Case Details
Practitioner Notes:
- Constant diplopia from severe lateral eye turn.
- No lateral movement in affected eye before coMra therapy.
- Prior treatments included steroids, binasal occluder, syntonic phototherapy, and frequency-specific microcurrent — all without improvement.
- After 12 coMra treatments, the eye was fully aligned, with normal range of motion.
- Visual acuity improved to 20/20 in affected eye.
- Visual field defect and enlarged blind spot normalized.
- Avoided planned surgical muscle reattachment.
- No regression at 1-year follow-up.
- Returned to work in television, having previously lost her job due to appearance-related constraints from eye misalignment.
Patient Outcome:
“Felt totally normal again; regained employment in entertainment field.” She expressed strong appreciation for the results and publicly credited the practitioner on the radio, now that she had become a radio DJ.
Follow-up:
Stable ocular alignment and function at 1-year review.
Related science:
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Combined laser + electrical stimulation improved visual acuity and VEPs in optic-nerve atrophy (n=27 patients, Gadjieva 1994), providing an early precedent for functional recovery of the optic nerve.
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Synchronized low-intensity modalities — laser, electrical stimulation, and millimeter-wave fields — produced sustained acuity and field improvements across optic-nerve disorders (n=443 eyes; post-traumatic subgroup n=62, Baranov 2016), consistent with functional normalization and surgical deferral.
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