A vegetarian student who was suddenly able to ‘taste bacon’ claims medics dismissed a vital brain tumour sign and instead labelled her a ‘hormonal fresher’.
Lucy Younger, from Cornwall, moved to the capital in September 2018 to study English Literature at Goldsmiths, University of London.
Yet just months later, the then 18-year-old began experiencing severe migraines and gustatory hallucinations, which cause tastes that are often strange or unpleasant.
Despite repeated GP appointments, her symptoms, which also included intense migraines, visual hallucinations and a sense of ‘deja vu’, were dismissed as anxiety and depression and she was prescribed antidepressants.
But after suffering a seizure and collapsing in 2020, scans revealed she had a benign brain tumour — which can cause changes to the sense of taste.
Lucy Younger, from Cornwall, moved to the capital to begin an English Literature degree at Goldsmiths, University of London . Yet just months later, the then 18-year-old, began experiencing severe migraines and gustatory hallucinations — which cause tastes that are often strange or unpleasant. Despite repeat GP appointments she was told she was just anxious and depressed and put on antidepressants
But after suffering a seizure and collapsing in 2020, scans taken at the hospital revealed she had a benign brain tumour. Pictured, Ms Younger in hospital after collapsing and suffering a seizure
Ms Younger postponed university for a year to undergo brain surgery to remove the tumour. But earlier this year, after suffering cold and flu symptoms, she returned to hospital. An ultrasound and biopsy revealed she had stage one thyroid cancer. Pictured, Ms Younger after surgery to remove part of her thyroid following her cancer diagnosis
While the tumour was successfully removed, the now 23-year-old was diagnosed with thyroid cancer in the neck this year.
Ms Younger, who now lives in South East London, said: ‘I fully threw myself into London life, I was always going on nights out. I wanted to make the most of being in London as I’d moved from such a tiny town.
‘I’d made some great friends and I was really settling in, I loved the degree I was doing.
‘Then I’d started getting really intense migraines. I would be sat in my uni lectures and I’d see these pink elephants in the room. I thought I was going crazy.
‘I’m a vegetarian but I could taste bacon while seeing these elephants. I was like “why can I taste bacon right now?”.’
Ms Younger visited her GP in London but they said she was ‘just anxious and probably depressed’, she claimed. She said: ‘There was no way that I was that anxious. I knew in my gut something was wrong.’
After continuing to experience symptoms, she returned to her GP a year later after becoming worried that she had a brain tumour.
Visual hallucinations, taste hallucinations and a feeling of deja vu — a sensation of having already done something — are all signs of brain tumours or epilepsy, which can be triggered by tumours.
However, Ms Younger claimed her concerns were dismissed again as being ‘hormonal’ and she was given a prescription for anti-depressants.
But after contracting Covid, her symptoms worsened and she began suffering with seizures and numbness down one side of her body.
Ms Younger, who then visited her GP again, said: ‘I turned around to the doctor and said “Could it be a brain tumour?”.
‘He said “Don’t be silly, you’re 19, you’re fit and healthy. No one at the age of 19 gets a brain tumour, it’s hormonal”.
‘I still really wasn’t being listened to. I kept being dismissed by doctors.
‘I was being told over and over again “you don’t have a brain tumour, it doesn’t happen to people your age”.
‘I felt like I was being really annoying and like I was being a hypochondriac.’
Ms Younger said the antidepressants she had been prescribed ‘didn’t do anything’ because she wasn’t depressed but left her feeling ‘dramatic’ and like she couldn’t trust herself.
But while in Cornwall in 2020, she collapsed and suffered a seizure. She went to A&E, where medics discovered she had temporal lobe epilepsy, which was triggering her seizures.
Epilepsy can raise the risk of strokes and psychological conditions, including anxiety and depression.
She added: ‘You know your body better than anyone and if you really think there’s something wrong you need to push for tests and advice. ‘If I’d taken the first piece of advice, I still wouldn’t know I had a brain tumour and I wouldn’t have found out I had thyroid cancer’
Ms Younger has since had half of her thyroid removed, takes medication for epilepsy and now undergoes twice yearly brain scans. She said: ‘It feels like it has completely stolen my twenties. ‘Even small things that aren’t that deep like all my friends go on nights out and I can’t go out drinking as I’m on medication.’ Pictured, Ms Younger with flatmate Ellie
The condition — which affects around 50million people worldwide — is usually diagnosed by the age of 20. The seizures start in one or both temporal lobes in the brain, which are responsible for memory, hearing and understanding language.
Gustatory hallucinations and the feeling of déjà-vu are among the common signs of the condition, according to the Epilepsy Foundation.
However, it was only after a follow-up appointment with her GP in Cornwall that she was referred for an MRI scan.
Within half an hour of the scan, doctors called her back and told her over the phone — due to Covid restrictions — that her epilepsy was being triggered by a paediatric benign brain tumour, she claimed.
These non-cancerous tumours are a mass of cells that grow relatively slowly in the brain and trigger headaches and epileptic fits. Surgery is the go-to treatment to remove the tumours.
Ms Younger dropped out of university for a year to undergo brain surgery and recover. But she returned to finish her undergraduate degree and completed a masters.
Then, in early 2023 — during her masters course — she became unwell with cold and flu symptoms.
She visited her GP who referred her for an ultrasound and biopsy, which revealed she had stage one thyroid cancer in the neck.
The cancer affects the small gland at the base of the neck that produces hormones.
There are around 3,900 new cases in the UK and 43,000 in the US each year.
Ms Younger said: ‘They said “thyroid cancer is really rare, you’re young, fit, healthy and a girl, we don’t think it’s cancer”.’
She added: ‘I didn’t believe them when they told me, I thought they’d gotten the wrong Lucy.’
Ms Younger has since had half of her thyroid removed, takes medication for epilepsy and now undergoes twice yearly brain scans.
She said: ‘It feels like it has completely stolen my twenties.
‘Even small things that aren’t that deep like all my friends go on nights out and I can’t go out drinking as I’m on medication.
‘They’re getting into relationships and settling down, but I can’t even think about that.
It’s hard to meet people and it isn’t really a good conversation starter.’
She added: ‘You know your body better than anyone and if you really think there’s something wrong you need to push for tests and advice.
‘If I’d taken the first piece of advice, I still wouldn’t know I had a brain tumour and I wouldn’t have found out I had thyroid cancer.
‘If there was more awareness around brain tumours and seizures, I’d have known and wouldn’t have thought I was going crazy.’