A “healthy” man who had a “spontaneous” brain haemorrhage and was put in a coma after having a portion of his skull removed is now learning to walk and talk again.
Avid golfer Philip Masey, a 31-year-old mortgage adviser, was living in Kidderminster, Worcestershire, with his girlfriend of three years when, on one day in February this year, he collapsed without warning while home alone.
Unable to get hold of him for several hours and becoming concerned, his mother, Charlotte Mannouris, 57, from North Leicestershire, travelled to his home where she found him unconscious on the floor – she immediately phoned an ambulance and he was blue-lighted to hospital.
After a scan revealed a “big bleed” on Philip’s brain, he was rushed for emergency surgery where a large portion of his skull was removed and he was placed in an induced coma, and Charlotte was warned he may never speak or work again.
When he came around six days later, Philip was “confused”, unable to eat solid food or string a sentence together, but in recent weeks he has made progress – he can now say a few words and take around three steps with assistance.
Philip is now recuperating at home under the care of his mother and loved ones, and Charlotte has launched a GoFundMe page to make adaptations to the home and to pay for additional physiotherapy sessions – but she said there is only a “slim chance” he will make a full recovery.
“Philip would say live life to the full because you just don’t know how your life is going to change overnight,” Charlotte, who works in financial services, told PA Real Life.
“He wasn’t someone who abused his body, he was a very healthy, fit man and he’s too young to lose the best years of his life.
“This could have happened to anybody, it was so sudden, so random and completely spontaneous – there was no preparation for it and no warning signs to look out for.”
On February 7 this year, Charlotte said Philip was alone at home after his girlfriend went away.
Charlotte said she received a call from one of Philip’s friends to say he was struggling to get hold of him.
“With his job, he’s often on the phone for a long time at once, so if I ring him and he doesn’t answer, he’ll usually call me back an hour or two later,” she said.
“I called him but this time, he wasn’t ringing back.”
After leaving numerous calls and messages, Charlotte drove the one-hour and 30-minute distance to his house, where she found him unconscious on the floor.
She immediately phoned for an ambulance and Philip was blue-lighted to the Queen Elizabeth Hospital in Birmingham.
There, he received a scan on his head where Charlotte said doctors could see a “big bleed” on his brain.
“They had to operate quickly, otherwise he wouldn’t survive the night,” she said.
Philip was rushed for emergency surgery, where a large portion of the left side of his skull was removed to reduce the swelling on his brain.
“I don’t think I blinked for 24 hours,” Charlotte said.
“I couldn’t believe what was happening, it was surreal.
“It was just a spontaneous thing that could have been just that one weakness in a vein in his head.”
Philip then spent six days in a medically induced coma and on a ventilator, which was a “worrying” time for his loved ones.
“Because we didn’t know how long he’d spent lying on the floor, we didn’t know what the prognosis would be,” Charlotte said.
“I was prepared for him to lose the use of his right arm and right leg, because the injury was on the left side of his brain.
“They warned me he may never speak and he would never work again.”
Thankfully, Philip has made positive steps in his recovery.
After waking up from the coma on February 14, Charlotte said he was “confused” and “in and out of sleep” but after a while, he started to recognise one or two people coming to visit him.
He was first fed through a tube before being weened onto soft food and now, he can eat as normal.
For his speech, movement and cognition, however, there is still a long way to go.
“He can say quite a lot of standard phrases like ‘yes please’ and ‘no, thank you’, but anything else comes out mixed up and indecipherable and I have to try and guess what he means,” Charlotte said.
“He wouldn’t be able to remember enough to do his job but he knows what he wants to do, like going back to bed and putting the TV on.
“He’s taking a couple of steps now, he’s in a wheelchair but he can stand up with help.”
At present, Charlotte said there is a “slim chance” he will make a full recovery.
“They’ve said he’ll walk, but whether he is fit and running like he used to, I don’t know,” she said.
“There’s a slight chance, a slim chance he could make a full recovery.”
On March 21, Philip was relocated to Evesham Community Hospital to rehabilitate, where he spent four weeks undergoing physiotherapy and speech therapy.
Since April 18, he has been able to return home to continue his recovery under the full-time care of his mother and family.
Charlotte has launched a GoFundMe page to help her make adaptions to the house, such as putting in a wet room, and to pay for additional physiotherapy and speech therapy sessions, raising more than £13,000.
“The NHS care has been very good but we need to top it up with private help,” she said.
“It needs to be quite intense to give him the best chance to recover and he will probably need it for a couple of years.”
To find out more, visit the fundraiser for Philip here: gofundme.com/f/philip-31-to-receive-intensive-therapy-after-a-stroke.
Subscribe or register today to discover more from DonegalLive.ie
Buy the e-paper of the Donegal Democrat, Donegal People's Press, Donegal Post and Inish Times here for instant access to Donegal's premier news titles.
Keep up with the latest news from Donegal with our daily newsletter featuring the most important stories of the day delivered to your inbox every evening at 5pm.