Doctors left my little girl hours from death saying her swollen head was ‘normal baby stuff’

WHEN little Molly Mai Wardle-Hampton was born, she was 7lbs and a healthy baby.

But just weeks later the newborn started to suffer with seizures, which her mum Corinne says was dismissed as ‘normal baby stuff’.

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A couple of weeks after Molly Mai Wardle-Hampton, her mum Corrine (pictured together above)Credit: SWNS
Corrine said that when she went to her GP she was dismissed and told that the seizures her little girl had been suffering were down to 'normal baby stuff'

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Corrine said that when she went to her GP she was dismissed and told that the seizures her little girl had been suffering were down to ‘normal baby stuff’Credit: SWNS
Weeks later she had to be blue-lighted to Alder Hey Children's hospital in Liverpool

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Weeks later she had to be blue-lighted to Alder Hey Children’s hospital in LiverpoolCredit: SWNS

The 37-year-old was sent home with her little baby and told to keep an eye on her condition.

Weeks later Molly was unable to move her eyes in a certain direction and Corinne noticed her little girl’s head was swollen.

Corrinne, who lives with her partner Paul, 33, again took her to her local GP in Flint, North Wales, who said that there was nothing to worry about.

In February, Molly’s health started to deteriorate and Corrine rushed her daughter to the Countess of Chester Hospital, where she works as a nurse.

Molly was immediately transferred by ambulance to Alder Hey Children’s Hospital in Liverpool where a scan revealed she had a large brain tumour.

Medics said that fluid was putting pressure on Molly’s brain and eyes and she would die within 24 hours if they did not operate on her immediately.

Molly underwent a gruelling three-hour operation to have the tumour removed – which had spread to three-quarters of her brain.

She has since been diagnosed with ependymoma – a rare cancer affecting the brain and spine.

Corinne said before her diagnosis, little Molly could only look to her right.

She said: “At three weeks old, I noticed seizures – about three of them in total. I went to the GP and got a referral to the paediatrics in Wrexham.

“We noticed that her head was quite big, we had noticed this from her six-week appointment at the GP.

“She always looked right, she couldn’t look left, that was brought up too. She was vomiting and being unsettled.

“A few weeks later, we saw that her head had continued to grow and her eyes were going in the opposite direction – this was because of the intracranial pressure.”

After being blue-lighted to Alder Hey, medics said Molly’s head size had ‘gone off the chart”.

What is ependymoma?

An ependymoma belongs to a group of tumours called gliomas.

They can start in the brain or spinal cord.

They can sometimes spread from where they started to other parts of the brain or spinal cord but they don’t spread to other parts of the body.

Ependymomas are often slow-growing, low grade tumours.

Symptoms: 

As the tumours are slow growing the symptoms usually develop over a period of months.

They include:

– headaches

– changes in mood and personality

– weakness in an arm or leg

– problems with coordination or balance

– seizures

– feeling sick and vomiting

– confusion

Treatment:

The main treatments for ependymoma are surgery and sometimes radiotherapy.

The treatment will depend entirely on the size and grade of the tumour.

A team of specialist doctors will be assigned to each case to determine the best course of treatment.

Source: MacMillan Cancer Support

Corinne added: “She had this big mass in her head and the rest was covered in fluid – that was what was pushing on her eye nerves.

“The diagnosis of the mass was discovered on February 1 and we were in surgery the next day. Six days later we were told she had ependymoma cancer.

“We were quite lucky she is a baby because the skull is not fused, so the skull could expand with the fluid.”

Corrine explained that if her daughter had been an adult, then she would have ended up with severe brain damage.

She said: “If she had been an adult, she would have ended up with severe brain damage or it probably would have killed her.

“The tumour covered three different parts of the brain. It covered a hefty part of the right hemisphere.

I don’t think I’ve processed it properly yet, we’re still in shock

Corinne

“My partner keeps saying to me now, ‘if you hadn’t kept pushing, she’d be dead by now,’ which is so scary.

“It was very frustrating because I knew something wasn’t right but I kept being told by the doctors that it was normal baby stuff. It was missed by many of them.”

Corrine says that the surgeon at Alder Hey explained to her that her little girl wouldn’t have survived 24 hours without surgery.

“I think in that moment I just went numb, I don’t think I’ve processed it properly yet, we’re still in shock.

“You just never expect that it’s going to happen to you”, she added.

Molly had surgery to remove the mass on February 2 and doctors confirmed six days later that the tumour was an Ependymoma, an aggressive form of brain cancer.

She has returned home and is undergoing twice-weekly rounds of chemotherapy in a bid to kill off the remaining tumour and stop it spreading.

She is now 14 weeks old and has a whole year of chemotherapy ahead of her.

‘ABSOLUTE AGONY’

Mum Corrinne added: “She’s obviously going to get really poorly and because she’s a baby and I can’t explain why this is happening.

“The likelihood is she is going to end up with ulcers, she’s going to end up in a lot of pain and lethargic.

“She can’t tell me that her tummy hurts, or that her skins itchy and feeling horrible.

“She’s going to be in absolute agony.”

A GoFundMe page set up to support the family has already raised more than £1,690.

Corinne added: “In a time when there is so much negativity, you have all shown me how wonderful people can be.”

Little Molly is now recovering at home but will still need to have ongoing treatment

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Little Molly is now recovering at home but will still need to have ongoing treatmentCredit: SWNS

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