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I collapsed without warning at 26 and life completely stopped - it was an AVM

I collapsed without warning at 26 and life completely stopped - it was an AVM
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I collapsed without warning at 26 and life completely stopped - it was an AVM Mez suddenly collapsed without warning at the age of 26 and was rushed to hospital A British woman who collapsed suddenly at work saw her life come to a shuddering halt - and there were no warning signs. Mez Olivia, 30, from Lampeter, Wales, says she had no symptoms before collapsing at work and coming round days later in intensive care. She was left with no feeling on the right side of her body and spent six...

I collapsed without warning at 26 and life completely stopped - it was an AVM Mez suddenly collapsed without warning at the age of 26 and was rushed to hospital A British woman who collapsed suddenly at work saw her life come to a shuddering halt - and there were no warning signs. Mez Olivia, 30, from Lampeter, Wales, says she had no symptoms before collapsing at work and coming round days later in intensive care. She was left with no feeling on the right side of her body and spent six months recovering in the UK, having to relearn to walk. The social media manager, who is still undergoing radiotherapy, said: "One minute I was laughing with everyone and the next I screamed and collapsed. "I had breakfast as normal that morning. There were no signs anything was wrong. My memory just stops." Her colleagues - she lived in Dubai at the time - rushed to her aid after she lost consciousness on 16 November, 2021. She said: "My co-worker caught my head and my manager put me in the recovery position and called an ambulance. It looked like I had died, so everyone was in complete shock." Doctors found that Mez had suffered a brain haemorrhage caused by an arteriovenous malformation (AVM) — an abnormal tangle of blood vessels in the brain. She spent 11 days in intensive care and received emergency treatment after doctors warned her family that she would not survive without intervention. Due to Covid restrictions, her sister was unable to travel to Dubai to give consent for surgery after testing positive. Her father and brother were faced with the agonising decision to go in her place. Mez said: "They were told it was life or death. If I didn't have the operation, I would die, but I needed written consent to go through with it." Medics performed an embolization procedure, guiding instruments through an artery in her groin to seal off the abnormal blood vessels responsible for the bleed. Large portions of her hospital stay remain a complete blur. She said: "It's two weeks of my life that I will never get back because I can't remember it. I had a drain in my brain and I don't think I realised how ill I was. "I remember my sister telling me to be careful not to hurt my right side when I was lying down and I said, 'I don't have a right side.' I couldn't feel it." After her condition stabilised in Dubai, Mez was flown back to Britain in December 2021 as her insurance cover was running out. She spent Christmas Day alone in hospital isolation before being transferred from Heathrow directly to Glangwili Hospital in Carmarthen, where she commenced her rehabilitation. Mez said: "My dad had to pay for a taxi from Heathrow, London where I landed, all the way to west Wales. Everyday was the same. I had hydrotherapy, physiotherapy and had to learn how to walk again." Placed on a stroke ward alongside elderly patients, Mez described the experience as a real eye-opener. She said: "I didn't realise how serious strokes were because I'd always associated them with older people. They gave me a side room, but sometimes I'd have to come out because someone had died. "It really showed me how devastating strokes can be." When she was discharged from hospital, Mez was informed she might never walk independently again and was advised to use a wheelchair. Determined to prove medics wrong, she committed herself fully to rehabilitation. She said: "I asked my consultant if I was ever going to be better than I was then, sitting in a wheelchair. "I told her I'd do anything. She said I could prove people wrong, and I thought, 'I'm going to do this for myself.'". Training with a personal trainer, Mez gradually regained her confidence and strength. By February 2023, roughly 19 months following her collapse, she was walking without a stick. She said: "I was told I might not be able to do it, but I did." Her recovery path continues. Since the AVM is positioned deep within her brain, surgeons were unable to extract it through surgery. Instead, she received radiotherapy in April 2023, a treatment that can take years to prove fully effective. Yet the treatment has introduced fresh complications. She has since lost vision on her right side and has suffered brain swelling, necessitating steroid treatment. She said: "The scariest thing is that something that's supposed to make you better can also take things away from you." Now three years since her collapse, she continues undergoing her five-year course of radiotherapy. Despite the obstacles, she remains resolute in pressing forward and has even travelled back to Dubai - something she once worried would never be achievable. She said: "I've managed to go back and do things I never thought I'd be able to do again. "It has taught me some serious lessons in life. I've persevered through everything and I'm still going strong." NHS advice on AVMs The Leeds Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust is one NHS website with guidance on AVMs. It says: "They can show rapid growth over a relatively short period of time during childhood or adulthood. However, at certain times, when the body’s hormone levels increase, such as in puberty and pregnancy, they can grow more quickly. Growth of an AVM can also be as a result of clotting, infection and trauma. They are one of the rare types of vascular malformation." It notes: "AVMs are benign. They are not a tumour or cancer, and whilst some people have extensive problems affecting several areas of their body, they cannot spread to other areas of the body."
AVM (ORG) AVM Mez (ORG) British (ORG) Mez Olivia (PERSON) Lampeter (LOCATION) Wales (LOCATION) UK (LOCATION) Dubai (LOCATION) Mez (PERSON) Covid (LOCATION) Britain (LOCATION) Heathrow (LOCATION) Glangwili Hospital (ORG) Carmarthen (LOCATION) London (LOCATION)
Originally published by Daily Mirror Read original →