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Daily Mirror
Daily Mirror
National
Ryan Fahey

Man told he is days away from coma after headaches dismissed by doctors

A man who turned up to A&E after vomiting in the middle of the night was told he was just days away from going into coma from an undiagnosed brain tumour.

Oliver Cooper-Grace, 22, said it took two months of experiencing debilitating symptoms - including dizziness and a sharp pain in the left side of his head - before doctors realised what was wrong.

He said he went to the GP four times with headaches, but each appointment lasted just two minutes.

Oliver was left bedbound and had to take all of May off bar one single day, Liverpool Echo reports.

The 22-year-old, from Bootle in Merseyside, finally got a scan when he turned up at A&E early one morning after staying up vomiting all night.

The doctor told him it was a tumour and he was five days away from being in a coma.

That prospect "terrified" Oliver, but he said: "Being diagnosed with a brain tumour actually came as a relief.

"I had realised something was seriously wrong, so understanding what it was and being told what treatment I would expect was good to know."

Oliver is receiving treatment from the Clatterbridge Cancer Centre in Liverpool (PA)

He had surgery to remove 70% of the tumour just two days later.

A week after, on his birthday, his friends showed up at his house with shaved heads.

He said: "They were amazed to see that I still had some hair – in fact, I had more than them!"

As he continues treatment, Oliver has to take time off his job caring for people with learning disabilities.

He said: "My mates just treat me as normal, apart from my new nickname, 'Swellhead', after my head blew up with the size of the tumour."

Oliver is sharing his story to raise awareness of brain tumours and encourage people to visit health professionals if they have worrying symptoms.

These can include headaches, fits, persistently feeling sick, vomiting and drowsiness, progressive weakness or paralysis on one side of the body, vision or speech problems, and mental or behavioural changes like memory problems or personality changes in personality, according to the NHS.

The carer had to push for scans more than he'd realised he would when he first went to the GP, but he said his care from The Walton Centre and The Clatterbridge Cancer Centre has been "great".

He said: "Nurses and doctors at both have been incredible."

Oliver is under the care of Dr Shaveta Mehta, consultant clinical oncologist at The Clatterbridge Cancer Centre NHS Foundation Trust, who said: "The early detection of brain tumours remains challenging, especially in young people, as these tumours are very rare and the symptoms can be vague.

"The common symptoms – such as headache and dizziness, as Oliver had – can be due to multiple causes, which in most cases are not serious.

"But if someone is experiencing a combination of symptoms which are persisting and/or getting worse over the time, you should seek urgent medical attention."

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