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Daily Mirror
Daily Mirror
National
Adam May & Andrew Robinson

Woman loses her leg after suffering freak 'paper cut' injury at home 17 years ago

A woman has lost her leg 17 years after suffering a freak injury at home.

Rebecca Humphreys, now 33, was decorating her bedroom in Wakefield, West Yorks, when she jumped from the windowsill.

Rebecca, who was 15 at the time, landed on a porcelain ornament that was resting on the floor, and screamed out in agony.

While there was a bit of blood at first, the injury to her foot looked like little more than an innocuous paper cut.

Little did she know the pain that it would go on to cause and the impact it would have on her life.

Just two weeks later, Rebecca's foot had ballooned to the size of a rugby ball.

Her mum Theresa remembers doctors saying it was so badly infected that it would need to be amputated there and then, YorkshireLive reports.

Rebecca Humphreys, 33, from Wakefield, has had her leg amputated after a foot injury left her in agony for 17 years (UGC)
Rebecca hasn't looked back since (UGC)

After a second opinion, surgery was ruled out and the foot was saved - but this was only the start of her problems.

It was later discovered that a shard of the ornament had penetrated her foot and had caused nerve damage, lead to pain that wouldn't go away.

Rebecca told doctors that she was in agony but was told that her foot was fine and the pain wasn't real.

For the next 17 years, sport-loving Rebecca was plagued by agonising pain and was eventually diagnosed with a chronic regional pain condition.

Painkillers were prescribed but nothing would shift the pain and misery. After hundreds of medical appointments, and many treatments and therapies, her suffering continued.

She had to give up her job and her mobility deteriorated. She couldn't touch her own foot because of the pain.

At one stage, Rebecca became suicidal. Amputation was raised as a possibility but surgeons were reluctant to carry it out because there was no guarantee it would stop the pain.

But she got her wish on April 26 when her leg was removed at Leeds General Infirmary.

Rebecca with her mum Theresa (UGC)

"I didn’t once look or wonder about the amputation," she said.

"I just felt like the weight of my shoulders had lifted." She says that the "sadness of my soul" has lifted, with the help from her beloved dogs and her mum.

"It made me feel like I have hope and feel so grateful for a second chance in life. I’m so thankful for all the support even if I’m not fully recovered I’ll never look back in any doubt."

Rebecca says she feels "stronger than ever" having endured "18 years of pain from my silly accident".

"I hope I can show to myself and others that anything is possible," she said.

"My mum has been at my side throughout it all and grew to understand what others couldn’t and fought my battle with me. It’s been tough and I still have many challenges ahead but I'm not giving up.

"I’m unable to really say what I’d like for my future as to me it will come to me as it’s planned. I want to be able to take a step without pain all the time and to walk and climb mountains. And walk my dogs alone without help."

Mum Theresa, who lives in Tingley, near Wakefield, said her daughter was still in some pain following surgery but it wasn't as severe as it had been.

"It is more manageable," she said.

"She was right all along. She was telling people all along since she was 15. Everyone kept saying it was a healthy foot. We found a consultant who believed in her.

"For years they could not decide what it was that she had. She has been on painkillers since she was 15. She is now aiming to be free of painkillers. She has lost so many years but is remaining positive."

Theresa said she wanted to thank Paul Harwood, a consultant at Leeds General Infirmary, for helping her daughter and "believing in her".

She claimed that medics could have done more back when her daughter was 15. "They didn't do a blood test or an MRI scan. The foot looked ok on the outside."

Theresa said: "It was a trauma injury. Her auto immune system should have switched off but it never did. They just thought it (the pain) was in her head."

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