A mum received a devastating 'one in a million' diagnosis after she sat on the toilet and her knees shattered.
Bethany Eason, 26, was left in agony after walking up a flight of stairs to her bedroom, and so she decided to sit on the set of the toilet to rest - and as she did, her knee bones horrifyingly fractured.
After being rushed to the hospital, a biopsy confirmed that the spontaneous fracture was caused by a giant cell tumour in her knee. It had weakened the bones and the surrounding soft tissue.
The mother, from Wirral, Merseyside, had to have her knee and thigh bones removed and replaced.
She was told that she'd never be able to regain full mobility, leaving her "heartbroken", but after seven weeks of intensive physio and nearly a year of strengthening and home exercises, Bethany has managed to regain full mobility.
Bethany now urges people to take symptoms such as aches and pains in their bodies seriously.
Aches and pains - which can be a symptom of giant cell tumours - mostly occur in the long bones of the arms and legs, growing quickly and damaging the affected bone as well as potentially spreading to nearby soft tissue.
Speaking out about her diagnosis Bethany said: “I was heartbroken - I used to dance, run and swim and thought I would never be able to do those things again.
“At that moment in time, you don’t see a way out – I was told when I had surgery that 99% of patients wouldn’t have full mobility after surgery.
“I said well, 1% can and I can be that 1% and prove you wrong and I did.
“I was told I couldn’t wear heels again and I thought ‘no one tells me I can't wear heels’.”
When Bethany, an activities coordinator, first started noticing pain in her knee she didn’t think anything of it, when she as 19.
And when the pain continued to worsen, she visited her GP who referred her for an x-ray and physiotherapy. Following the x-ray, she was told there was "something there" - but doctors were unsure what the issue was.
However, after returning from college, Bethany says on February 26, 2017 she was experiencing severe pain while walking upstairs to get to her bedroom.
She sat down on the seat of the toilet to rest – and as she did, her knee shattered.
But thanks to the team at The Robert Jones and Agnes Hunt Orthopaedic Hospital she made a full recovery – and nominated nurse Pip for the NHS trust’s Patient Choice Award, which she then won.
Now, Bethany says she goes for annual scans and check-ups and wants to encourage others to get checked out if they feel something isn’t right, adding: “I had pain in my knee on and off intermittently but being 19 I was blasé and thought it would be fine.
“It would get worse, then would go back to normal, then get worse again.
“I went to college one day, came home and my knee was sore when I got upstairs, so I sat down on the toilet seat, and it just shattered.
“I felt this immense pain and it was almost like a pop, it was really traumatic.
“My partner called an ambulance which took ages to come and I went to Arrowe Park hospital.
“I was transferred to The Robert Jones and Agnes Hunt Hospital in Oswestry and had really traumatic first night - they think my knee shattered again during the transfer.
“I had to have a knee and thigh bone replacement and learn to walk again - going from crutches to one crutch to doing it on my own.
“The whole team were fantastic, and this one nurse was fantastic – she held my hand and was always there, she was first person to show me my scar."
She continued to say: “It was little moments which were the light during a dark time – they made sure I was as cared for as possible even thought it was such an awful time in my life.
"It’s really important to raise awareness of rare tumours, you wouldn’t think a pain in your knee would be something like that.
“I didn’t know what my life was going to look like, now I can do all those things they thought I wouldn’t be able to - I can kneel and run after my little boy.”
Giant cell tumours of the bone make up approximately 4-5% of all tumours which start in the bone and occur in an estimated 1 person in every 1,000,000 people per year, according to the Bone Cancer Research Trust.