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Freak accident leaves Rachel Pighills in danger of ‘internal decapitation’

A freak accident involving a ceiling fan has left a woman in danger of ‘internal decapitation’ and suffering a rare condition.

Freak accident leaves UK mum at risk of paralysis or death

A UK woman injured by a ceiling fan was left with a rare condition that could “internally decapitate her” — and she is trying to raise enough money to travel to an American surgeon for a complex operation, according to a report.

Rachel Pighills, 35, of Worcestershire, suffered the debilitating injury when she was struck in the head by the fan while standing on her bed as she moved into a new house in 2018, SWNS reported.

The freak accident left the woman with atlantoaxial instability and basilar invagination — a life-threatening condition in which her skull and brain have slipped into her spine, causing a bone to protrude into her brain stem, her husband, Guy, 41, wrote on a GoFundMe page.

As a result, Ms Pighills can no longer turn her head at certain angles due to the risk of her spine partially dislocating, which could result in paralysis or death from an “internal decapitation, the New York Post reported.

Rachel Pighills was injured by a ceiling fan. Source: GoFundMe
Rachel Pighills was injured by a ceiling fan. Source: GoFundMe
The accident has left her at risk of “internal decapitation”. Source: GoFundMe
The accident has left her at risk of “internal decapitation”. Source: GoFundMe

“After further investigations many complex tests show a rapid deterioration of her brain stem function, which can shut down completely at any time, leading to brain stem death,” Mr Pighills wrote.

In January 2020, she underwent occipital spinal fusion surgery to relieve the compression from her brain stem and improve her quality of life, he said.

Rachel underwent occipital spinal fusion surgery to relieve the compression from her brain stem. Source: GoFundMe
Rachel underwent occipital spinal fusion surgery to relieve the compression from her brain stem. Source: GoFundMe

A surgeon used rods and screws to fix her skull to her spine and then removed a piece of bone from her skull and spine to create more room for her brain, he said.

But the doctor, who had been new to the procedure, reportedly failed in the effort.

“Because of the brain stem compression, the signals are all incorrect. The brain stem subconsciously controls everything,” Guy told SWNS.

“Her heart rate can go from 60 to 140 in the click of a finger. The signals are getting confused,” he said. “There is no quality of life now, she is just gasping for breath. She ideally needs none-invasive therapy for her breathing but it is complicated.”

A surgeon used rods and screws to fix her skull to her spine and then removed a piece of bone from her skull and spine to create more room for her brain, but the surgery failed. Source: GoFundMe
A surgeon used rods and screws to fix her skull to her spine and then removed a piece of bone from her skull and spine to create more room for her brain, but the surgery failed. Source: GoFundMe

The devoted husband added: “It has left me feeling heartbroken and helpless.”

Ms Pighills only hope appears to be groundbreaking surgery by Dr Paolo Bolognese in Long Island, reportedly the only surgeon in the world prepared to perform the ultra-delicate procedure.

In 2014, the Italian native joined Neurological Surgery, PC, as the director of the Chiari Neurosurgical Center, according to his bio. He is affiliated with North Shore University Hospital in Manhasset.

“Nothing else will work. My only option is to have decompression surgery and the sooner I have that, the better my chance of having a complete reversal of symptoms and full recovery,” Ms Pighills said.

“It would mean me leaving my teenage daughter here for school, but she understands how serious this is and how life-changing it could be,” added Ms Pighills, who described living in “constant fear of paralysis and death.”

“I feel like I can’t do anything. I go to work for a few hours a day, come home and lie horizontally on the couch. I do not do anything else,” said Ms Pighills, who uses a neck brace and is confined to a wheelchair.

Rachel Pighills lives in “constant fear of paralysis and death”. Source: GoFundMe
Rachel Pighills lives in “constant fear of paralysis and death”. Source: GoFundMe
She is now raising money for more surgery. Source: GoFundMe
She is now raising money for more surgery. Source: GoFundMe

The family has so far raised about $64,000 but needs $650,000 for the operation.

“Sadly time is crucial now as Rachel is in respiratory failure and every day I am witnessing her deterioration,” her husband wrote. “The quicker we can raise the funds the more hope we have of her making a full recovery. Rachel is now unable to leave the house unaided and has no quality of life.”

He added: “Watching my wife suffer and dying before my eyes is soul-destroying. Our daughter constantly worries that she may come home from school one day to find out she’s lost her mom for good.

“All Rachel wants is to stop living in fear of dying and leaving her family behind. Rachel’s hopes and dreams are like all mums, she wants to watch our daughter grow up and one day be a proud mum at her wedding,” he wrote about the 14-year-old girl.

This story first appeared on the New York Post and has been republished here with permission

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Original URL: https://www.news.com.au/lifestyle/health/health-problems/freak-accident-leaves-rachel-pighills-in-danger-of-internal-decapitation/news-story/26798504ccc1bb78f78a11c363361901