Mum told she had vertigo was later given 'brutal' diagnosis

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CARRIE HOWARD WAS GIVEN MEDICATION FOR VERTIGO WHEN SHE STARTED EXPERIENCING HEADACHES AND LOSS OF BALANCE 07:42, 22 May 2025Updated 16:13, 23 May 2025 A mum who was told she was cancer-free


discovered the disease was still hiding in her brain years later after doctors repeatedly dismissed her symptoms as vertigo. Carrie Howard, 43, was given the all-clear for triple-negative


breast cancer in 2023 when scans from her neck down showed no sign of cancer. After undergoing a mastectomy, months of chemo and radiotherapy, the 43-year-old from Wigan said it "felt


like life could begin again". Almost two years later, in December last year, Carrie said she started experiencing headaches and losing her balance so visited her GP three times, where


her doctor repeatedly gave her medication for vertigo. But her symptoms persisted and she went to Wigan Hospital A&E where doctors revealed her cancer was still lurking in her brain and


had progressed from stage three to four. The family are now fundraising for alternative treatments for Carrie to give her more time with husband James, 43, and their sons Theo, 14, and


Ruben, 10. Article continues below Carrie said: “When I rang the bell thinking I had beaten cancer, it felt like a weight lifted and life could begin again. We thought the chemo had mopped


up cancer anywhere else in the body and I was cancer-free. “But the brain tumour was there all along. “It was very hard having to sit the boys down again and say ‘mummy has to go through


more treatment’. If I knew at the time, I would have had a private MRI scan to check my entire body.” Carrie’s health ordeal began in July 2022 when she noticed a pea-sized lump in her left


breast while putting on her pyjamas. At Wigan Hospital, an MRI scan from the neck down confirmed that she had stage three triple-negative breast cancer, a more aggressive and


faster-spreading type compared to others. The cancer was also detected in her lymph nodes but doctors assured her it was treatable and immediately initiated a six-month course of


chemotherapy. “It was a shock,” Carrie said. “I thought they would run some tests and send me home but they said the chemo would mop it up and rid me of it. “It was brutal – I lost my hair,


my eyelashes, my eyebrows – but I could see the light at the end of the tunnel and was fighting to beat it.” In January 2023, Carrie had a mastectomy on her left breast and radiotherapy to


ensure the cancer was gone. Three months later, another hospital scan from the neck down showed no sign of cancer and she rang the bell to celebrate getting the all-clear. “It felt worth


it,” Carrie said. “We’d put our lives on hold and now it was over.” Carrie slowly returned to normality, resuming work, attending football practice with her sons and enjoying a family


holiday to Turkey. In December 2024, she began getting headaches, feeling as though she was going to fall over and veering to the right when walking. Her GP prescribed Carrie with vertigo


tablets on three separate visits until she took herself back to A&E for further tests this February. “Doctors did an MRI and then took us into a separate room and told us there was a


shadow on the scan,” she said. Further tests revealed Carrie’s triple-negative breast cancer had moved to her brain before chemotherapy and managed to withstand the treatment, she said. A


blood-brain barrier protects the brain from harmful substances in the blood stream, meaning not all chemotherapies are effective. Doctors diagnosed Carrie with stage four metastatic brain


cancer and performed a seven-hour surgery to remove a large tumour from her brain. Soon after, she underwent targeted radiotherapy to shrink a second, smaller tumour that was trickier to


access. Now the family are awaiting results to find out whether Carrie really is cancer-free. Husband James Howard, a 43-year-old sales manager, said: “We’re hoping that it’s all been


removed and that Carrie gets to ring the bell again. “But we also have an anxiety of whether it will come up somewhere else. Carrie still has a lot of fight in her but you can only withstand


so much in one go.” If Carrie does not get the all-clear, her family are researching alternative treatments and clinical trials in the UK and abroad. However, options are limited due to


there being limited data and people with her type of cancer. James added: “Wigan Hospital has only treated two other people who had triple negative cancer that moved to the brain so the data


just isn’t there. We don’t know what comes next so we need to be prepared.” Best friend Rebecca van der Lee, 41, has launched a GoFundMe page which has so far raised £17,540 towards


Carrie’s treatment and recovery. This includes a fundraising event of live music and karaoke at The Farmers Arms in Bispham, Lancashire, on June 6. “The support has been amazing, it’s just


incredible,” Carrie said. “Friends are giving support and everyone is rallying together.” The family is raising awareness of breast cancer, secondary cancers and the importance of checking


for lumps regularly. Carrie is also advocating for full-body scans for patients where cancer has reached the lymph nodes as this often leads to a faster spread. A link to Carrie’s GoFundMe


page can be found here: gofundme.com/f/mhfbw4-carries-cancer-battle A spokesperson for Wrightington, Wigan and Leigh Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust (WWL) said: "The well-being


and experience of our patients at WWL is paramount and we understand the stress and fear that comes with a cancer diagnosis and treatment. Article continues below "While current


national guidelines do not make recommendations for routine brain imaging unless symptoms are present, we are committed to addressing any concerns Ms. Howard may have. "We encourage Ms.


Howard to contact our Patient Advice and Liaison Service at 01942 82237 or [email protected] for a thorough review of her care."