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Daily Mirror
Daily Mirror
National
Alice Suffield & Sam Elliott-Gibbs

Woman who thought she had tinnitus forced to learn to walk again after tumour diagnosis

A woman who knew she had to see the doctor when he headaches worsened had to learn how to walk again after discovering she had a brain tumour.

Jessica Jones, 38, started suffering with tinnitus and decided to see her GP, WalesOnline report.

The mum-of-three soon discovered the terrible truth - and it totally changed her life. She eventually needed a zimmer frame to leave hospital after a life-saving operation.

Now she is aiming to do an ambitious 10,000 Steps a Day in February Challenge to raise money for a cancer charity.

Banker Jessica said: "I didn't actually get to see the GP because it was in the middle of the pandemic, but he prescribed me migraine tablets.

She had to learn how to walk again after an emergency operation (MEDIA WALES)
Her daughters, Ella, left, and Emily, right, were right behind her (MEDIA WALES)

"I told him I'd never had migraines in my life, but I took the tablets and the GP said if it doesn't improve by the following Monday to come back.

"Over the weekend I'd continued to have really bad headaches, I was in horrendous pain with them, I felt a bit dizzy, I just didn't feel right at all."

A few days later, Jessica returned to the GP and was referred for a CT scan. During the two to three-week wait for a scan, her blood pressure became abnormally high and she was admitted to Prince Phillip Hospital in Llanelli for further tests.

Jessica recalled the day she went into hospital on her own due to Covid restrictions and after two days of tests was given the devastating news that she had an acoustic neuroma causing pressure on her brain stem.

All Jessica had in hospital was a picture of her family to keep her company (MEDIA WALES)

"When you hear those words, 'you've got a brain tumour' - it was terrifying, I was absolutely petrified and I just burst into tears.

"I phoned my husband to tell him which was heartbreaking, all he wanted to do was to come and sit at the end of the bed and tell me everything was going to be alright - but I couldn't have that."

Whilst in hospital, Jess was told that she would have surgery within six to eight weeks, but due to Covid backlogs, Jess ended up waiting six months.

On January 20, 2021, Jessica's husband Mark dropped her off at the hospital, gave her a kiss goodbye and drove away. Jessica would then spend the next two weeks away from her family.

Jess' partner Mark helped her through the trauma (MEDIA WALES)

She underwent a gruelling 13-hour operation where surgeons removed a section of her skull from behind her ear, and successfully took out most of the tumour. Surgeons advised to leave a small part of the tumour which had grown around the facial nerve, to avoid causing facial palsy, however the procedure has left her with single-sided deafness.

Following surgery, Jessica’s first recollection was when she opened her eyes and she said the whole room was spinning. She went on to continue to experience a form of vertigo by simply turning her head or speaking.

Jessica spent two weeks in hospital, with no visitors. Aside from hearing loss, acoustic neuromas and their surgical removal can cause vestibular damage, which can result in balance issues.

"It was hardest on my eldest daughter. After the operation, she was absolutely petrified that mammy wasn't going to get back to normal.

"She didn't like to see me that I couldn't walk around the house or that I was sleeping a lot. They think you're like Superman, so it was really hard for her to see me like that.

"I was really afraid that the kids would be afraid of me. This surgery had a high chance of facial palsy and I had a pretty large scar.

"Even now, when I put my hearing aids in, I tell them that they are mammy's little fairies helping me hear, just so it isn't as bad for them"

Simple things like standing were difficult in the first few days, post-surgery, but Jessica worked with her health team at Heath Hospital in Cardiff to improve co-ordination of eye and head movements and balance retraining to allow her to walk.

At the age of 37, Jess left the hospital, trundling along on a Zimmer Frame.

Jess said: "Having to use a Zimmer frame was a really big adjustment, it was really hard to see myself like that. But when I thought about it, two weeks before I couldn't stand without being sick, so to be walking out of the hospital at all was amazing."

Jessica is now taking on an ambitious 10,000 Steps a Day in February Challenge to help find a cure for brain tumours.

She said: "It may not seem like that big a challenge to some, but considering a year ago I was struggling to walk without a Zimmer frame, it's a huge challenge for me.

"My family come out with me at the weekends, I am so lucky to have their support."

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