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Daily Mirror
Daily Mirror
National
Harrison Moore & Adam May

Mum's shock after 'clumsy' 10-year-old really had cancerous tumour

A mum says she thought her 10-year-old daughter was just being "clumsy" - but she actually had a cancerous tumour growing in her brain.

Jackie Nelson, 35, said she wasn't overly worried about daughter Ava until she started getting headaches and feeling constantly sick and dizzy.

She took he to a GP who brushed her illness off as a viral infection which would soon go away, she said.

After three more visits to the GP, Ava was finally referred to the children's assessment ward at Cross House Hospital near Kilmarnock, Scotland, last month

It was there that Ava was diagnosed with a high grade glioblastoma brain tumour after an MRI scan.

Jackie, a carer, from Kilwinning, Scotland, said: "It seemed she was just being clumsy at home, until she started to complain about feeling sick and dizzy all the time.

"Something in my heart knew she wasn't right, and if I'd have listened to the doctors at the start Ava wouldn't still be with us."

Ava Nelson, 10, was diagnosed with a high​ grade glioblastoma brain tumour (Jackie Nelson / SWNS)
Ava after being rushed to hospital (Jackie Nelson / SWNS)

Following her diagnosis, Ava was taken straight to the Queen Elizabeth Hospital in Glasgow in an ambulance and booked in for brain surgery the very next morning.

Surgeons had to relieve the pressure which was building as a result of the tumour before it damaged her brain.

The operation went well, and she was immediately referred for her first rounds of chemo and daily radiotherapy.

She has been staying at Marion House, free accommodation run by charity Young Lives vs Cancer, opposite the hospital for the past seven weeks, with her mum.

Ava Nelson with mum Jackie Nelson and her two sisters (Jackie Nelson / SWNS)
Ava's radiotherapy will finish on August 5 when doctors will review her progress (Jackie Nelson / SWNS)

Ava's radiotherapy will finish on August 5 when doctors will review her progress - and Jackie is praying it will be good news.

"The last two months have been a whirlwind and Ava has been so brave through it all," mum-of-three Jackie said.

"She's having daily radio therapy and taking chemo tablets to try and shrink the tumour.

"We should find out how her radiotherapy has affected the tumour in the next month and we're all praying it will be good news.

"Ava is the most loving, positive girl and an amazing daughter and I couldn't be prouder of her."

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