"I just knew something was wrong. I felt something move and I was in excruciating pain," Mrs Jeffrey said. Fortunately, she still had her phone in her hand. "Help can't move pls call," she messaged her husband Sam. She was taken to Sandringham Hospital where she was told she had a wry neck and given exercises to get it moving again.
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After several hours, her left arm developed numbness and tingling. She was told to stop moving immediately and was transferred to The Alfred hospital's spinal trauma unit where neurosurgeon Mr Patrick Chan revealed that her top two vertebrae had dislocated. He said the cervical 1 and cervical 2 literally jumped over each other. Her head was pressed down onto her right shoulder and locked in that position.
He said it was very rare for a sneeze to cause this injury, which was usually seen in trauma patients. "I think she's very unlucky and it was a violent sneeze," Mr Chan said. Fortunately the injury did not harm her spinal cord or cause neurological damage. Mrs Jeffrey was fitted with a halo traction and weights were used to gradually move the vertebrae back in place. Initially, she was devastated to learn that she would spend three months in a halo traction, leaving her unable to care for her son, Tom.
There's a news video here.
2 comments:
Why the hell is she smiling!?!
She's stuck that way. She is actually in extreme pain.
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