For Lynda, her symptoms were multi-faceted – including vision problems, confusion/disorientation, difficulty breathing easily when walking uphill despite swimming multiple times a week- so it wasn’t clear at first how all the symptoms were all connected.
Being in her 60’s she put some things down to age, while she thought others were related to recent stress around her husband Michael’s own cancer diagnosis, and the passing of her Mum.
“My family noticed my behaviour, was a bit off. Then I noticed I couldn’t do my button on my dressing gown, and I couldn’t do up my bra. I didn’t think much of it. Then I went for a short walk to the local supermarket, and ended up completely disoriented. I haven’t got a great sense of direction, but this was bordering on ridiculous.”
Encouraged to go to the GP by her husband, she had scans which revealed a significant brain tumour, which had metastasised from her lungs and spread also to her adrenal gland and liver.
“I was told that I had a brain tumour, which was eight and a half centimetres and the shape of a pear, but that the primary cancer needed to be identified”
Facing this news, Lynda said, “It was a shock, but I just thought ‘Okay, well come on, let’s just deal with this. What’s the next step?’.”
Following surgery at another hospital, Lynda was recommended to come to The London Clinic for cancer treatment, including chemotherapy, which she calls her ‘amber nectar’ and immunotherapy.
At The London Clinic she’s under the care of an expert multidisciplinary team including Dr Dionysis Papadatos-Pastos, Consultant Medical Oncologist, who she says has been “unbelievably fantastic”, with a positive attitude to match her own.

