← NewsAll
Man's weight-training pain revealed a brain cancer diagnosis.
Summary
A 31-year-old in South Yorkshire who thought his pain came from weight training had a seizure that led to scans revealing a high-grade brain tumour; he underwent a nine-hour operation and later completed radiotherapy and chemotherapy.
Content
A 31-year-old man in South Yorkshire who initially thought his headaches and neck pain were due to weight training was later diagnosed with a high-grade brain tumour. He experienced a sudden seizure in July 2022 that led to a CT scan and the discovery of a lesion. He had a nine-hour craniotomy in November 2022 and subsequently received radiotherapy and chemotherapy.
Key points:
- He first sought physiotherapy for persistent headaches, neck pain and tingling down one side, and no clear cause was identified at that time.
- A seizure in July 2022 prompted hospital assessment and imaging that revealed a brain lesion.
- Surgeons carried out a nine-hour operation in November 2022; the charity reported he also suffered an acute stroke during surgery.
- He completed five weeks of radiotherapy beginning in January 2023 and 12 rounds of chemotherapy, finishing in February 2024, and is reported to be back at work and fundraising with his family.
Summary:
The diagnosis and treatment pathway has left him focused on rebuilding his life, with reported return to work, cycling and fundraising activity alongside his family. Undetermined at this time.
