Sly Saint
Senior Member (Voting Rights)
Daily Mail
A woman has claimed doctors dismissed her fatigue and vision problems as being related to depression, menopause or fibromyalgia—but after being bedbound for two years, discovered they had been symptoms of a brain tumour.
Karen Tait, 57, a former office manager from Fakenham in Norfolk suddenly began feeling hot, achy, clammy and fatigued in October 2022.
Within weeks, she suffered blurred vision and found it difficult to focus or look at bright lights.
She also developed a severe sensitivity to smells and noise, and gradually her legs 'hurt so much' that she became bed bound.
Mrs Tait said: 'One day, I went to bed, and I didn't get out of bed again for two years.
'I also had what I describe as concrete neck. I felt I couldn't lift my head. I also suffered with insomnia.'
It wasn't until 2024, when she was 'too ill' to attend a routine MRI scan to check for signs of vaginal cancer, a disease she had previously overcome, that her gynaecologist booked her in for an MRI scan while under sedation.
These tests revealed she had a non-cancerous type of tumour called a meningioma in her brain, and she underwent surgery to remove it.