A superfit teenager who had weak legs and back pain while at Leeds Festival was shocked to discover he had a tumour - which left him paralysed.
Brandon Hackett, now 20, was diagnosed with Ewing sarcoma last year - a rare type of tumour that occurs in the bones or in the soft tissue surrounding bones. Brandon, from Barnsley, first noticed he was experiencing back pain in July 2021 while training for a weightlifting competition.
After visiting his doctor, he was told it was tight muscles and he started physiotherapy. However, the pain continued and even spread to his stomach. Then, while walking home from a shift at work, he noticed a tingling sensations down his legs.
Worried, he again made an appointment with his doctor but was told it was likely sciatica, which is caused by an irritated nerve. Brandon then went to Leeds Festival in August 2021 and noticed his legs were feeling weak on the Saturday, before waking up on the Sunday struggling to walk.
When he got home, he collapsed in his bedroom. After a trip to the hospital, he was told to go home - where he collapsed once again. When he returned to the hospital, he needed to use a Zimmer frame.
Tests revealed something was compressing his spine and he was transferred to Sheffield Hospital. At that point Brandon couldn't even stand up.
After emergency decompression surgery, he gradually began to regain minimal movement in his legs and was eventually diagnosed with Ewing sarcoma. The cancer hadn’t spread and treatment began in October 2021.
Brandon said: "I just thought it was sciatica because I was doing 300kg deadlifts at the gym. I didn’t know if I'd slipped a disk.
"When I collapsed, I didn’t know what was going on. I’m quite a chill person so I wasn’t really too worried but I was confused and thought ‘this is not normal’."
He added: "It was really scary and weird with a tingling sensation that didn’t go away, every time I tried to move it was like my whole body was getting electrocuted. It felt like my legs were cemented to the floor and I couldn’t even move my toes."
Following chemotherapy, Brandon slowly began to regain movement and began to teach himself to walk again, something he was worried he would never be able to do again. "I had to spend an entire week lying on my back to reduce swelling in my spinal cord – it was a relief when I started to get movement back towards the end of the week," he said.
It took Brandon six months to regain all movement in his legs. Now, he has been told he will make a full recovery – and has even started visiting the gym again. He said: "I got from having to use a Zimmer frame to just using a stick on my own as I didn’t want to wait for physiotherapy.
"I've only really just started physio but I can walk without any help, I just take a stick in case I lose my balance. The tumour is gone now and scans have come back all clear – I'm back in the gym again too."
Brandon is now planning to become a personal trainer.
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