Over 450 Total Lots Up For Auction at Three Locations - CO 05/12, PA 05/15, NY 05/20

World's Tallest Man Stretches Out-Over Eight Feet-for Needed Gamma Knife Surgery

Press releases may be edited for formatting or style | August 26, 2010
Unique radiosurgery patient
ATLANTA/PRNewswire/ -- Much of Sultan Kosen's eight feet, two-inch stature rose up in an 17-year period starting at age 10, when the benign tumor in his brain's pituitary gland highjacked the organ, causing it to secrete massive amounts of growth hormone, making Mr. Kosen's body grow fast and grow without ceasing. He will need to wait several months to find out if his Gamma Knife® surgery last Thursday at the University of Virginia (UVA, Charlottesville, Va.) has inactivated the tumor and he has reached his final height, but his physicians are optimistic.

Mr. Kosen-confirmed by Guinness World Records as the Tallest Living Man-had reached the limits of what open surgery, standard radiation therapy or medication could do for him to treat the tumor responsible for his acromegaly.

"What was left was a small amount of tumor in a difficult-to-reach area," says Jason Sheehan, M.D., Ph.D., co-director of UVA's Gamma Knife Center. "We delivered his Gamma Knife radiosurgery in about an hour-and-a-half on August 18. Mr. Kosen experienced a little discomfort as we tried to fit the stereotactic frame around his head, but were able to assemble the frame around his large cranium. Overall, the treatment went very smoothly and his prognosis is pretty favorable. We predict either his growth hormone secretion will hit a normal level within six to 24 months or it will be sufficiently improved that his acromegaly can be much more easily controlled with medication."
stats Advertisement
DOTmed text ad

Training and education based on your needs

Stay up to date with the latest training to fix, troubleshoot, and maintain your critical care devices. GE HealthCare offers multiple training formats to empower teams and expand knowledge, saving you time and money

stats
Gamma Knife radiosurgery, a gentler alternative to traditional brain surgery, delivers up to thousands of low-intensity radiation beams to one or more targets and with pinpoint accuracy. In Mr. Kosen's case and many patients with recurrent or residual pituitary adenomas, "there is no better treatment than Gamma Knife surgery for lesions in the pituitary region," Dr. Sheehan notes.

Filming of a TLC (The Learning Channel) documentary on Kosen, The World's Tallest Man: Still Growing (aired August 8, 2010), ultimately brought Dr. Sheehan and Mr. Kosen together.

"Following several tests at UVA, I was presented with Gamma Knife surgery as an option to treat the tumor," Mr. Kosen says. "After returning to Turkey, Dr. Sheehan kindly offered to perform this treatment."

Acromegaly a growing problem in more ways than one

Mr. Kosen's experience with acromegaly has been similar to those of many other sufferers, an ongoing litany of problems, from the practical and mundane to the life threatening. Standard clothing and cars are simply too small for him, among a multitude of other things. More seriously, Mr. Kosen's condition affects his internal organs-requiring monthly injections to control their growth-and joints which have to cope with the stresses of supporting a massive body.