Mum, 41, told she had months to live following an unexpected seizure

Mum, 41, told she had months to live following an unexpected seizure

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The unexpected attack occurred in March, which required Lisa’s husband, Dean, to revive her.

Soon rushed to hospital, an MRI scan revealed Lisa had a large brain tumour – and along came the devastating terminal prognosis.

Lisa’s mum, Rosemary, said: “The day when they walked in and said it’s a brain tumour and she’s got six months was one of the worst days of my life.”

Surgeons completed a nine-hour operation to remove 90 percent of the growth in Lisa’s brain.

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The biopsy revealed a grade three Astrocytoma, which requires chemotherapy and radiotherapy.

Within a week, Lisa was sent home, but she soon suffered from a massive stroke that left the whole of her left side paralysed.

Rosemary shared: “Dean rushed into hospital and rang me at 3am, saying they’d taken her to Yeovil Hospital.

“I stayed up all night waiting to hear more, and then I received a text at 11am the following morning saying I needed to come to the hospital as she was getting worse.”

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Rosemary added: “At that moment, I thought she was dying. I drove to Yeovil Hospital a bit like a maniac.

“Dean was stressed outside the hospital, and I thought she’d died. I cupped his head in my hands and said, ‘Tell me now, tell me what’s happening.’

“He told me she was getting worse, and he needed to get some air as he was exhausted.”

Thankfully, Lisa survived, but “she’d lost her whole left side”, but is now “recovering slowly”.

Lisa will soon begin radiotherapy and chemotherapy to shrink the remaining tumour in her brain.

“While they can’t cure her, they’re optimistic they can control it,” said Rosemary.

“It’s so ingrained in the brain, what’s left will be monitored with MRI scans every three months to see if it grows, and further operations will be likely.

“Hopefully, the seizure tablets will mean she will not have seizures. She could have five years, 10 years, or more. We do not know.”

Rosemary started a crowdfunding campaign to allow Lisa and Dean to enjoy a Cornish beach holiday.

“The pair of them have never had a decent holiday,” said Rosemary. “Dean has always worked so hard, and Lisa qualified as a dog groomer and worked hard.”

Because of the circumstances, neither of them have been able to work, which means “money is tough” at the moment.

“It’s been months of hospitals, needles, nurses, doctors, surgeons. As fantastic as they’ve been, they need time to rest and be themselves,” said Rosemary.

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