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Alabama woman’s 50-pound cyst went undetected by 4 doctors

July 5, 2018  18:53

Kayla Rahn wasn’t pregnant. She didn’t even have a ‘food baby.’ What the 30-year-old did have was a 50-pound ovarian cyst. Although it has now been successfully removed, questions linger about how it went undetected for so long.

The Alabama woman started gaining weight in the summer of 2017, in spite of making no major dietary changes. At first, she thought that her recent career move to a desk job was to blame. Tasks that were once simple — like putting on her shoes — became nearly impossible, as she struggled to catch her breath or bend over.

In the fall, Rahn began experiencing pain and noticed that her stomach felt really hard. Strangers started asking if she was pregnant — with one inquirer going so far as to ask if Rahn was expecting twins — and occasionally rubbing her belly.

Medical professionals told Rahn that she just needed to lose weight. Rahn tried but, in spite of her efforts to eat healthier and go to the gym, she kept gaining. When she went to work out, she would immediately lose her breath. Rahn said that she spoke to four doctors, none of whom identified the mass growing in her ovary.

Dr. Gregory Jones, a staff physician at Jackson Hospital in Montgomery, said that he thinks it’s fair to call that a “miss.”

“Certainly, something of this nature that’s not identified on repeat examination is a miss,” Jones stated before offering this reminder. “Physicians miss things. We all do from time to time; we’re all human. However, we all work very hard to take care of our patients.”

Jones and the team at Jackson Hospital, however, did not miss the cyst. When Rahn’s mother forced her to go to their emergency room the night of May 25, Dr. Richard Sample, “scanned her and the diagnosis was made pretty quickly,” Jones said.

From there, Jones and general surgeon Dr. Reza Seirafi took over, and Rahn had surgery on May 26. Jones estimated that the surgery took no longer than 90 minutes. When it was over, they’d removed a 50-pound mucinous cystadenoma, which Jones said is a type of cyst known “for producing large masses in the pelvis.”

“The unusual part of that was just the sheer size and volume of the mass,” Jones said, “and that it had gone unrecognized for so long.”

Rahn, too, was stunned by the size of the growth — which she nicknamed ‘Juicy Lucy’ — when she finally saw it. “They basically told me it was the size of a watermelon,” she said of what she knew before her surgery. “I knew it was large, I just didn’t expect it to be as large as it was. There’s different sized watermelons, you know what I mean?”

Since having the cyst removed, Rahn said that her life has gotten better. Now, she can put on her own shoes and even pick out which ones she wants to wear — an opportunity that was robbed from her by swelling in her legs before the cyst was removed.

The future is brighter for Rahn, but she and Jones both had plenty of advice for people who might be in a similar situation, unable to get definitive answers regarding their medical issues.

 

 

 

 

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