logo
I thought my leg ached from walking too much but doctors asked me a chilling question and uncovered the sinister truth

I thought my leg ached from walking too much but doctors asked me a chilling question and uncovered the sinister truth

The Irish Sun07-07-2025
WAKING up in the night in pain, Megan Skalska blamed her aches on walking too much.
At the age of just 23, she was fit and healthy and had no reason to suspect anything sinister.
8
Megan Skalska blamed the ache in her leg on walking too much… but the truth was much more sinister
Credit: Cover Images
8
After an MRI scan, a CT scan, another X-ray and lots of blood tests, Megan's mind was initially put at ease - before doctors said there had been a 'malignant transformation'
Credit: Cover Images
The first signs that something was wrong came in October last year.
But soon after the 'bone deep' pains began to disturb her
sleep
, Megan noticed a lump on the left side of her hip.
'At first I just thought it was a swelling,' she says. 'But I decided it would be best to get it checked.'
It was a decision that could prove to save her life.
She went straight to hospital where she had an X-ray and was sent home in the early hours of the morning.
Later that day, at about 7am she received the phone call that would change her life, forever.
'The first question they asked me was: 'Do you have any cancer in the family?'' Megan tells Sun
Health
.
'That's when I knew that something wasn't right, especially because they got back to me so quickly.'
After an MRI scan, a CT scan, another X-ray and lots of blood tests, Megan's mind was put at ease when medics told her the lump was a benign tumour.
But her relief soon disappeared and was replaced by panic, when it emerged that doctors feared the tumour had a 'malignant transformation'.
Video explaining the different types of bone cancer, symptoms and treatments
Megan, from Sittingbourne in
Kent
, was sent for a consultation at the specialist Royal National Orthopaedic Hospital in Stanmore.
She was told that doctors suspected the tumour was cancerous, but that they wouldn't know until they'd conducted a biopsy.
'By that point, everything felt surreal,' she says. 'It was inexplicable; I thought everything was against me.
'The doctor prepared me for the worst, but my doctor was really positive, which helped.'
Megan then faced an anxious wait for surgery.
Experts made a custom tool to remove the tumour - but by the time the operation took place, the mass had grown so much that it couldn't be used.
The surgery on January 28 was long and complicated - and involved surgeons removing half of Megan's hip, but it was a success.
'At first, I was supposed to have a small operation, which would have only had a four-week-long recovery,' she says.
8
The surgery on January 28 was long and complicated - and involved surgeons removing half of Megan's hip
Credit: Cover Images
8
Aside from facing her cancer diagnosis, Megan was also haunted by a fear that her leg would have to be amputated
Credit: Cover Images
8
Despite having to learn to walk again, Megan started a new marketing job one week after surgery
Credit: Cover Images
'But on the day of my operation, I found out that they just kind of went in and removed everything as they probably suspected the cancer was already there.
'The tumour was just growing so quickly at that point.'
Being in hospital was harder than Megan thought it would be.
She woke from the anaesthetic full of tubes and her recovery was exhausting and long.
SURVIVAL MODE
'I thought I'd be in the hospital for three days max, but I ended up being in hospital for three weeks, and I had an epidural in my back for the first week, so I couldn't feel anything from the waist down and couldn't even move my toe, which was pretty scary,' she says.
'Even just sitting up in bed was really difficult.
'Luckily my mum Jo was by my side constantly, which really helped. And the nurses were super supportive in getting me everything I needed.'
On Valentine's Day Megan was finally told she had stage 1 chondrosarcoma, a rare type of bone cancer. Initially she felt numb.
'I thought that my mental health would really suffer throughout the cancer diagnosis,' she says.
'But oddly, I think the
survivor
mode just kicked in, and I persevered.
'I just thought there's no point in me asking, 'Why has this happened to me?'
8
Bone cancers can cause five subtle symptoms
'I had to keep positive because being sad wasn't going to change anything. So I just kind of stayed strong through it all.'
Before her diagnosis, Megan says she was a 'lot more emotional" and would 'cry over nothing at all'.
Going through this has totally given me a new perspective on life. I worry less about the small things
Megan
But with her cancer diagnosis came a sense of perspective, she tells Sun Health.
'I think it made me realise that my worries previously weren't real worries at all,' she adds.
'I wanted to stay strong for my family and friends, as well as myself.
'It could've been a lot worse.'
Aside from facing her cancer diagnosis, Megan was also haunted by a fear that her
'I Googled chondrosarcoma and just saw lots of girls having their legs amputated,' she says.
'That was really scary and I was having panic attacks. It's frightening to think about losing part of your body.'
Three days after her diagnosis Megan was able to go home without any further treatment.
Despite having to learn to walk again, eager to move on from the traumatic illness and in desperate need of distraction, she started a new marketing job one week after surgery.
8
As soon as she was given the green light from her doctors, she grabbed her crutches and booked holidays
Credit: Cover Images
8
Megan has a 30% chance of the cancer returning
Credit: Cover Images
'Going through this has totally given me a new perspective on life,' she says. 'I worry less about the small things.
'I now realise I didn't really have any problems until I had health problems.
'It was really scary looking at survival rates and the percentage chances of the cancer coming back.'
Megan has been told that she has a 30 per cent chance of her cancer coming back.
But rather than focus on that statistic, the 23-year-old is holding on to the fact it means there is a 70 per cent chance it won't.
As soon as she was given the green light from her doctors, she grabbed her crutches and booked
holidays
to Barcelona and
Morocco
.
And tomorrow she will hold a fundraiser to raise
money
for the
Reflecting on her ordeal, Megan says she is so grateful she went to A&E when she did, and she wants to encourage others to go straight to the doctor if they fear something is wrong.
'There's no point waiting – if I had waited, I could have lost my leg or even my life.' she says. 'If your body doesn't feel right, get it checked.
Who's most at risk of bone cancer?
There has been a lot of research into the causes of bone cancers but, like most childhood cancers, a definite cause is unknown.
But it is important to remember that nothing you have done has caused your child's cancer.
Children who have hereditary retinoblastoma - a rare tumour of the eye - may have an increased risk of developing osteosarcoma.
Children who have previously had radiotherapy and chemotherapy also have an increased risk of developing osteosarcoma.
It's not caused by injuries or damage to the bone, although an injury may draw attention to a bone tumour.
The development of Ewing sarcoma may be related in some way to times of rapid bone growth, which may explain why more cases are seen in teenagers.
Source:
'It's just so important not to let doctors and your GP turn you away because you're young, because when something's not right, it's not right.
'You never think it's going to happen to you, but just because you're young, that doesn't mean you're immune.
'I am worried about it coming back. But I'm just super grateful to even have that fear.
'Because so many cancer patients don't have the positive outcome that I had.
'I'm still in physio and I have a huge scar on my hip, but I've just kind of accepted that.
'It's nothing to be embarrassed about and I was happy to wear my bikini in Barcelona and not give it another thought.
'It shows me who I am, what I've been through, and how strong I am. I'm still here, and that's something to appreciate.
'I appreciate everything these days.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Sex File: My partner wants to try new things in bed
Sex File: My partner wants to try new things in bed

Irish Examiner

time2 hours ago

  • Irish Examiner

Sex File: My partner wants to try new things in bed

I am in my 60s and have been in a relationship with a man for ten years. We have always enjoyed our sex life, but now he keeps wanting to try new things, talking about fantasies of me with other men and women - including a female friend he has history with - which is turning me off. Is there a way back to the sex we used to enjoy? By the time men and women are in their mid to late 60s, sexual desire is usually declining and about half of all men in their 60s experience erectile dysfunction. The simplest explanation for the change in your partner's behaviour, therefore, is that he now needs stronger stimuli to achieve the same level of arousal and is using sexual fantasy to increase excitement. There seems to be some underlying concern for you about when the female friend he has history with became part of this narrative, but try not to jump to conclusions. He may simply be nursing an infatuation as a way of turbocharging his interest in sex. Whether an infatuation is reciprocated or not, it is a dopamine rush, a euphoric state fuelled by lust and novelty. The possessed can think of nothing else and so they strive to introduce the person they are fixated on into any conversation, at any opportunity. Telling you about his fantasies may be a way for your partner to increase his sexual energy, but it is quite likely that the woman in question is oblivious to your partner's sexual interest in her. Frenzied sexual vigour rarely comes from nowhere, especially in older men, so it's worth thinking about when this all started and what might have triggered it. Has he started watching a lot of porn? Did he start taking Viagra recently? Has he had other health issues? You don't mention any recent diagnoses, so this information may be irrelevant, but it is worth asking the questions in case they provide answers. Older men occasionally experience intense sexual fantasies, urges or behaviours as an unintended side-effect of drugs that are prescribed for medical conditions such as Parkinson's disease or restless leg syndrome. It's also well known that people with dementia can become overly interested in sex - but less well known that sexual behaviour can change before any sign of cognitive decline. Psychiatrists at Uskudar University in Istanbul published a case study of a 55-year-old man who had been brought to their clinic by his wife. She was upset because he had started to stay up all night talking to women online. He was also demanding more sex from her. Neither the patient nor his wife reported any cognitive decline but MRI scans of the husband's brain subsequently revealed that he had frontotemporal dementia. There is a lot to think about here. Your partner has been willing to share his fantasies with you and consistently puts you at the centre of them. These are good signs, but you might need to be more open about how his behaviour makes you feel so that he can allay any doubts you have about what is really driving it. If he can reassure you that there is no one else involved and that this is an attempt to inject some excitement into your relationship, there is every chance you can harness his newfound enthusiasm for sex in a very positive way. Send your questions to suzigodson@

Man dies after being pulled into MRI machine while wearing metal chain
Man dies after being pulled into MRI machine while wearing metal chain

Extra.ie​

time16 hours ago

  • Extra.ie​

Man dies after being pulled into MRI machine while wearing metal chain

The wife of a man who died after being pulled into a magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) machine has spoken publicly about the tragic incident. Keith McAllister, 61, was fatally injured on Wednesday, July 16, during a visit to Nassau Open MRI in Westbury, New York. His wife, Adrienne Jones-McAllister, was present when the horrifying event unfolded. Adrienne, who was undergoing an MRI scan on her knee, asked a technician to bring her husband into the room to help her up afterward. At the time, Keith was wearing a heavy metallic chain around his neck — something he often used for weight training. Despite the chain, Adrienne said he was allowed into the scanning room. Moments later, the powerful magnetic force of the MRI machine pulled him in. MRI scan stock photo. Pic: Getty Images 'In that instant, the machine switched him around, pulled him in, and he hit the MRI', Adrienne told News 12 Long Island. She and the technician attempted to free him, but it was too late. Police received a 911 call just after 4:30 p.m., reporting that a man had suffered a 'medical episode' after being caught in the MRI. Two days later, it was confirmed that Keith had died from his injuries. A hospital physician officially declared him deceased. Adrienne says this wasn't the first time the couple had visited the facility, nor the first time staff had seen Keith's chain. 'They had a conversation about it before, 'Oh, that's a big chain,'' she alleged. View this post on Instagram A post shared by News 12 New York (@news12) MRI machines, while crucial for diagnostics and treatment, are known to pose serious risks due to the strength of their magnetic fields. According to the National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering, the magnets inside an MRI are 'strong enough to fling a wheelchair across the room.' In the UK and Ireland, strict safety guidelines advise all patients to remove metal items, including jewelry, piercings, watches, and hearing aids, before entering MRI suites. Adrienne, who says she loved her husband 'so much,' is still grappling with the shock of the accident. 'He waved goodbye to me, and his whole body went limp,' she said. 'I'm still trying to wrap my head around the thing.' The Nassau County Police Department has launched an investigation into the circumstances surrounding Keith McAllister's death.

Iconic Scots comedian and ex-radio host diagnosed with prostate cancer as stand-up urges other men to get checked
Iconic Scots comedian and ex-radio host diagnosed with prostate cancer as stand-up urges other men to get checked

The Irish Sun

time16 hours ago

  • The Irish Sun

Iconic Scots comedian and ex-radio host diagnosed with prostate cancer as stand-up urges other men to get checked

SCOTS comedy icon Fred MacAulay has been diagnosed with prostate cancer. The standup has had regular checks after his father and big brother were diagnosed with the illness. Advertisement 2 Comedian Fred MacAulay has revealed that he has prostate cancer Credit: Getty 2 The funnyman used to host the MacAulay and Co. show on BBC Radio Scotland Credit: PA:Press Association The 68-year-old hadn't been displaying any symptoms but following his most recent check-up, doctors broke the news to him. But the radio host is adamant that he won't let his diagnosis get to him. Fred told "It wasn't until my own father developed prostate cancer and then my older brother was diagnosed too that I actively decided I'd better do something to explore whether I was also at risk." Advertisement The comic's father, also named Fred, passed away aged 73 in 2002. He had faced a lengthy battle with prostate cancer and mesothelioma. Fred said: "When my brother Duncan, who is now 72, was diagnosed with prostate cancer eight years ago, I thought it was about time I took the hint and got checked out. "I'm lucky enough to be able to get the incredibly accurate MRI tests, which can show things up quickly. Advertisement Most read in Celebrity Exclusive "When it became clear I'm more at risk because of the prevalence of prostate cancer in my family, I've been getting tested every couple of years. "After the last test a few weeks ago, my doctors got back to me and advised further action was needed. "Although I've not had any symptoms, the final tests came back positive just a few days ago and I am waiting to see what the medical team advise is my next step." Fred is focused on spreading awareness about prostate cancer and is urging other men to get checked out. Advertisement David Beckham is left with a huge BALD patch after DIY haircut blunder - and wife Victoria admits 'it looks terrible' He said: "I hope by speaking up this will encourage other men to get checked out too. It could save their lives. "My brother and my family and friends are all good about speaking up about prostate cancer. But I know not everyone is. "It's always been a scary thing to talk about, but with all the progress in medicine, the best thing to do is be aware, get tested and catch it quickly as it gives you the best possible chance of beating it." Fred, from Perth, previously presented the Macaulay and Co. daily show on BBC Radio Scotland. Advertisement The father-of-three has worked as an accountant and is married to his teenage sweetheart, Aileen.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store