ANNOUNCER: It can be two of the most frightening words a doctor can say. Brain tumor. For a parent those words can be even more paralyzing when they're meant for your child.
FRED J. EPSTEIN, MD: Here we see a beautiful boy, right? That's you. He's got a brain tumor. A brain tumor. And as a parent, you say, "My God, that's like lightening that comes out of the sky, right?" In fact, I know what you do. You wake up at night and you say, "I wish it was a dream" or you wish it was you.
ANNOUNCER: Eleven-year-old Ahmad had only recently begun complaining of the headaches and difficulty breathing he had suffered from but couldn't articulate since the age of 8.
AHMAD: When I have my headaches they come up from my nose into my eyes.
ANNOUNCER: Thinking it was a sinus problem, his father took him to an ear, nose and throat specialist.
FATHER: He checked his nose and then he said, he got a sinus. Yeah, he has to go look at the scan.
DR. ALLAN: Then he did a CT scan of the sinuses.
FATHER: Yeah, and then they saw something in the back. Then they say, he must come in the following day to do the MRI.
DR. ALLAN: So basically they sort of, as we say, backed into the diagnosis of the brain tumor. They weren't really looking for a brain tumor. They thought he had a sinus infection.
FATHER: Yeah.