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A Survivors’ Tale

Published on July 24, 2017 in Share Your Story

I live in the beautiful seaside city of Cape Town, South Africa. I have an amazing husband and family. It was 4 years into marriage when my husband and I decided we would try for a baby. We got lucky! After 4 months we were blessed with a baby boy. I had a dream pregnancy which ended in an emergency c-section whilst I was at the hospital having a my final appointment. My son went into distress with the cord wrapped around him and we delivered soon afterwards. I always thank God for that because 4 months later I suffered my first seizure. At first it was diagnosed as post pregnancy stress, but after my second seizure I had an MRI which revealed an avocado sized tumour in my frontal lobe. If I had natural birth it is highly likely that my son and I would not have survived.

The next day I was booked in for my first surgery to try remove most of the tumour, second surgery followed to try decrease swelling. I was in an induced coma for a week and in ICU for another. It was diagnosed as a grade III Astrocytoma; however here I am 3 years later with no tumour growth and no real side effects apart from occasions (usually when I’m stressed) where I can’t speak. I am physically fit, I exercise. I am on anti seizure meds for probably the rest of my life which I hope will be a long one!

I have gone for 6-monthly scans and visits to my neurosurgeon since my op in 2014. Today’s MRI showed a small white spot that wasn’t on my last scan. We will wait until my next 6 monthly scan to see whether it changes, but for now I continue my life being positive and grateful for every second I have with my beautiful son and husband. P.S. Things that were perhaps early signs: migraine headaches for a few years (ignored, my dad also gets them), several episodes of not being able to speak (one bad one was misdiagnosed as a hemiplaegic migraine).

The world works in mysterious ways, if I had an MRI when I first noticed the signs, I wouldn’t have my son. It’s a miracle that things followed the sequence they did.


Opinions expressed within this story belong solely to the author and do not reflect the views or opinions of the National Brain Tumor Society.

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