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    Categories: Healthlife

25-Year-Old Brain Tumor Patient Left With One Side Of Her Face Paralyzed After The Surgery


A woman’s half-face has been paralyzed after surgery to remove a brain tumor caused her to have a stroke.

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Samantha Taylor, 25, has a problem with monthly dizziness since her teenage years, which would wake her up in the middle of the night.

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When she consulted with a doctor, an MRI scan showed a small tumor in her brain at the age of 18. But doctors didn’t operate because they thought the mass was not cancerous and her symptoms were minor.

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Ms. Taylor, from Bromsgrove, Worcestershire, goes to checkups every six months to monitor the present development of a tumor.

But her symptoms remained as it is, and medics changed her appointments to just one per year in 2014.

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When she thought everything is ok now, her dizziness came back four years later, causing her to have blurry vision and terrifying head rushes.

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The financial officer, underwent brain surgery in June to remove the tumor – which had grown to over 2.2cm.

According to doctors, a possible stroke during surgery left her with facial paralysis on her right side. She is now struggling to eat or drink properly. She was also temporarily blind during the procedure.

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Ms. Taylor said: ‘I was really apprehensive about the risks of surgery and whether I would be the same afterward.

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 But I really liked my surgeon and had full confidence in him which made a huge difference. 

 ‘I had surgery in June 2019, where they think I may have suffered a cerebellum stroke as part of my brain didn’t get any blood supply during surgery, and that does explain why my right side is much weaker.

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 ‘After my surgery, I couldn’t see at all for a few days. This is much better now as it only happens when I look left and right and I have been given glasses with a prism to help with the double vision as I currently see two of everything.

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‘Due to my facial paralysis, I couldn’t eat properly, use a straw or blow out a candle until recently. The more movement I get in my cheek, the easier it is to do these things.’

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‘I first had a dizzy spell when I was 14, and then again at 15. These were considered one-offs, but when I was 18, they started happening monthly until my surgery.

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‘They would only last a few seconds but would always be in the early hours and wake me up. 

‘I would wake in the night to a head rush and spinning walls. I was monitored for five years with MRI scans every six months from 2013 to 2014, then annually until 2016.

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‘I was due to be discharged in October 2018, but that final scan showed that the tumor had grown to 22mm.

‘I was shocked because although I had been told I might need surgery one day if it ever grew, I was due to be discharged and therefore thought that for the doctors to consider doing that then the chances of it growing were slim. I wasn’t expecting the news at all.’ 

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 She added: ‘I had a lot of physio in the weeks following my operation and part of that was simply putting a key in the door and carrying a cup of tea a short distance with my right arm as I couldn’t do these things at first.

 ‘I physically couldn’t use an escalator until a few weeks ago. They were so fast; it was brain overload. 

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 ‘I had a physio session dedicated to mastering one and went up and down one until I was confident.

 ‘I think living in London, not being able to use one was such a hindrance as it meant I wasn’t able to get anywhere as every tube station has one.’

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Ms. Taylor created an Instagram account to document her journey and she wants to inspire others who are suffering from brain tumors. 

She said: ‘I want people to be aware of my story and to push not to be discharged even if they’re told they have a slow-growing tumor that hasn’t changed yet. 

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‘This could be lifesaving. I was very lucky mine grew in that last scan, but if it didn’t it would have grown to a point that made me very poorly and would have been much riskier to remove.’ 

 

 

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