Cardiff woman's fatal brain tumour discovered after suitcase fell on head

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Cardiff woman's fatal brain tumour discovered after suitcase fell on head
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Lauren Macpherson was travelling home from a festival in London when her life changed forever.

Lauren Macpherson found out she had terminal brain cancer after a suitcase fell from a train's overhead storage on to her head It was meant to be the "first of many" celebrations for Lauren Macpherson, who had spent the August bank holiday at a music festival in London.

She had just passed her exams for a promotion at work and bought her first home with her boyfriend, Zak. But when a 35lb suitcase fell from the train's overhead storage on to Lauren's head on the way home to Cardiff, it ended with the 29-year-old finding out she had been living with terminal brain cancer. "We kind of wanted to start celebrating and start living you know," said Lauren, who has been told she can expect to live for about 10-12 years. Recalling the moment she found out, Lauren said: "It's like the floor just drops from beneath you, you don't know what to do, it's horrible."Lauren had just spent the weekend in London celebrating passing her exams when she discovered she had a brain tumour The impact of the suitcase falling on Lauren's head last year caused a lot of swelling and doctors were initially worried she may have a fractured spine. Lauren was taken off the train at Swindon for medical care and a CT scan revealed a shadow on her brain."There is an instinct inside you, and when you have been feeling unwell, it just all made sense." Two days later, Lauren was referred for an MRI in Cardiff, which is when she was told it appeared to be a brain tumour.Despite the data suggesting Lauren's life expectancy could be 10 to 12 years, she hopes it could be "so much more"and extreme fatigue in the year before the accident, but said it was put down to her hormones or then-undiagnosed ADHD. She said she went to her GP three times for various tests, as she was also experiencing gut issues, as well as blackouts. The fatigue was so bad Lauren moved from full time to part time work as a cardiographer she so could manage her studies for her Masters degree."I didn't think at this point, it's incurable, I just thought 'they've found it, they can get rid of it'."Lauren and her partner Zak had spent August bank holiday celebrating before the accident on a train changed her life The next appointment with her consultant was a month later, which is when the severity of her diagnosis became clear., a fast-growing brain tumour, and she could have just two years to live if it was aggressive. "We just had our flat whites, we thought we would be an hour there and go on with our day," Lauren laughed. "We did not expect it at all. Then it kind of hit me and that's when you're like 'oh my God, you could be looking at two years'."A CT scan to rule out injuries caused by the suitcase discovered a shadow on Lauren's brain Lauren was told she would need an operation to remove the tumour, but the wait on the NHS would take four months. Not wanting to wait, she reached out to a private clinic under Zak's healthcare cover with his job, which cut that to three weeks."Even in the consultation, I didn't cry. I didn't not cry because I'm brave, strong and hard... it's not that. "But for me, it's almost like you have a survival instinct that kicks in... I wasn't happy, I wasn't sad, I wasn't hopeful."Lauren said her diagnosis "completely blindsided" herA biopsy then confirmed she had a grade two"It's almost like somebody had given me a new brain, it was really strange, nothing made sense, I didn't feel like me," said Lauren. With the tumour in the speech vortex of her brain, Lauren was unable to speak for weeks after surgery and lost a lot of her cognitive function."I underestimated how difficult the first month would be, I just wanted to start feeling OK."Lauren's partner Zak, proposed to Lauren at her favourite beach in her hometown of Swansea just weeks after her diagnosis Wanting to speak to others going through the same experience, Lauren started an Instagram page to raise awareness and document her journey. "You just want to talk to people and see how everyone else is doing and how other people feel," she said., a less aggressive treatment used for patients not in need of immediate chemotherapy or radiotherapy following surgery.guidelines on the NHS in ScotlandThe Welsh government said it relied on NICE's independent advice to ensure the cost of treatments made routinely available to patients in Wales were "in balance with their benefits". "While trial evidence shows it can slow cancer progression, there is no clear evidence it helps people live longer," a statement said. It added NICE had provisionally recommended vorasidenib should not be available on the NHS, but final guidance was expected to be published later this year.Lauren says her diagnosis has been incredibly difficult for her family to comprehend living life without her Lauren needs scans every three months to monitor her tumour and is in the process of going through fertility treatment before starting her treatment of Vorasidenib, which she is getting through a private provider. "Medicine is excelling at a rate it has never done before, AI is taking over as we know, so I'm really hopeful on that front." Lauren remains hopeful for her future, but admits to having "these moments with your family where you break down and you can't breathe". "The whole thing has been hard for me... but for family, it's almost been harder for them," she added. "I think everyone always says 'I wish it was me not you' but I could really see it with them, constantly the pain in their eyes, because they wanted it to be them not me.

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