A woman had been hiding a line in her fingernail with polish for years - but then read a magazine and discovered that it could be a sign of a deadly form of cancer.
Alana Severs, 36, ignored the tiny mark on her fingernail for three years by covering it in red nail varnish, but soon she found it could be something much more sinister than just an 'embarrassing line'.
She read an article on Cosmopolitan magazine's website in January 2017 - detailing how a line on your nail can be a symptom of an unusual type of cancer.
Panicked Alana went to her GP the next day and they sent her for an urgent referral, and after a biopsy she was diagnosed with melanoma and had to have two surgeries to remove the cancer.

Alana, a nurse, from Portsmouth, Hampshire, said: "Because it was just a tiny line I never thought anything of it and I always wore red nail polish to cover it up because I was embarrassed about it.
"Then reading this article made me panic. But I'm relieved I came across it when I did - it might just have saved my life."
When Alana first spotted the article on Cosmopolitan magazine's website she immediately knew that something could be wrong with her nail.
She said: "I thought, 'no way -that can't be it.'

"I sent screenshots to my partner in an absolute panic and said my nail looks exactly the same. I was terrified that I had cancer and couldn't believe that I ignored it for so long.
"I went to the GP the next day and it was an urgent referral."
Medics at Queen Alexandra Hospital, Portsmouth, told Alana she needed her fingernail removed immediately before it spread into her bloodstream.
She said: "By some miracle, although it had been growing outwards and the line was getting bigger, I was so lucky that it hadn't started growing down yet so I was cured with a few surgeries.
"It was literally reading an article that made me go to the doctors the next day. They said it was brilliant that it hadn't grown down into my hand. It had just grown outwards so it hadn't got to my blood yet.
"I was so lucky that after three years it hadn't done that. It was one of those incredible things that it hadn't, it could have gone down at any point."
Now Alana has been left without a fingernail, but she is grateful she caught it before it spread.
She said: "It really shook me up that I saw it in an article. It was something that I had and I ignored. I'd mentioned it in passing before but it was just brushed off.
"What I thought as a frivolous pastime, reading an article at 11pm, while I was in bed turned out to save my life. You don't think that anything like that would change my life.
"But my life was changed, just by reading an article. I could have gone another three years without thinking anything of it - and it could have spread and become deadly."
Now Alana has been left with no fingernail and had to have a skin graft from her arm to cover her wound.
She said: "After the surgery I felt nauseous and it was painful for quite some time but it did heal. Now it doesn't bother me at all. I would rather lose my whole arm and get rid of the cancer than risk it spreading."
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