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Home / Lifestyle

Brave mum battles rare pain condition for 'dream baby'

By Alyce Collins
Other·
17 Nov, 2019 10:40 PM7 mins to read

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Toni Lea has shared her journey to help others. Photo / Media Drum World/Australscope

Toni Lea has shared her journey to help others. Photo / Media Drum World/Australscope

Being diagnosed with an intense pain condition known as the "suicide disease" wasn't going to stop this brave woman from becoming a mum as she refused pain killers to achieve her dream - which left her in agony for months.

Toni Lea Lawrence, 33, from the Gold Coast was a senior paralegal for 13 years but was forced to give up her career after being diagnosed with a rare chronic pain condition affecting the trigeminal nerve.

While she was at work in March 2010, Lawrence was engulfed in pain and her left side stopped functioning. She feared she was experiencing a stroke, and when a colleague commented that her face didn't look quite right, she panicked and went to the GP surgery nearby.

The doctor who saw her thought she could have a brain tumour and sent her for an MRI. As her pain intensified, nurses gave Lawrence pain medication to ease the agony.

Doctors discovered that the pain was caused by a condition called trigeminal neuralgia (TN) which sees even minor facial stimulation trigger excruciating pain.

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It is unknown what caused the condition in Lawrence's case, and although it isn't curable it can be manageable with daily pain medication.

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Lawrence was distraught to learn that the pain medication would have a negative impact on her fertility, but after marrying her husband Kieran, 32, in 2015, she couldn't ignore how much she wanted to be a mum.

Her longing brought her to the brave decision to wean off her pain medication so she could get pregnant – which fortunately happened in September 2016. The pregnancy was incredibly difficult as it heightened the pain, but she couldn't take any pain relief to ease it, until immediately after the birth of the couple's son Theo.

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"I was a senior paralegal for 13 years, but I had to give up my career when my pain got too much," said Lawrence.

"In March 2010, I was sitting at my desk reading emails and my first thought was that I was having a stroke because I was in so much pain and my left side was struggling to work, and I could barely talk.

"My colleague came up to me and said my face looked strange, referring to the left side of my face because I couldn't move it due to the pain.

"The doctor's surgery was straight across the road from work, so I went there straight away. The GP thought I might have a brain tumour, so I was sent for an MRI immediately.

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"Nurses gave me pain relief and I was able to talk again so I asked what was wrong with me. The doctor diagnosed me with trigeminal neuralgia, and I had no idea what it was. I was just hoping it was something that could be fixed quickly.

Toni Lea at the hospital for a check up of her condition. Photo / Media Drum World/Australscope
Toni Lea at the hospital for a check up of her condition. Photo / Media Drum World/Australscope

"I took a lot of pain killers and anti-epileptic pills, I was also admitted to hospital for pain a lot of the time, but nothing was working. I had brain surgery two months after being diagnosed but it was unsuccessful in numbing the pain.

"The pain started off like an electric shock, sometimes like a thick elastic band snapping against my cheek and gums. After 10 years, the pain has changed a lot, and the pain I have now is a constant burning pain on the left side of my face.

"It also feels like someone has fishing wire wrapped around each tooth and is trying to pull them out. My tongue feels like it's being cut in half, it's numb and tingly. I get a pain like an electric shock around my eyes.

"It is triggered by stress, touching my face, really cold weather, really hot weather and wind hitting my face.

"I found out that prolonged use of the pain medication is linked to infertility in women, and the unbearable pain means that most women with TN can't carry a child at all. It was scary, all I ever wanted was to become a mum so the thought of not being one was awful.

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"I learned how to wean myself off my meds so I could fall pregnant and by August 2016 I stopped taking anything. It was a difficult decision to come off my medication because I knew my pain would be horrendous and it would be such a long time to deal with it without medication, but I wanted a child so badly."

Trigeminal neuralgia is often referred to as the "suicide disease" because the pain is so unbearable, yet Lawrence refused to let it stop her from becoming a mum. After discovering she was pregnant in September 2016, she took regular walks to distract herself from the pain and used heat packs frequently.

When she was 35 weeks pregnant, while making her way downstairs to find a heat pack to soothe the pain, Lawrence slipped down the flight of stairs and landed on her hands and knees. The fall caused the baby to drop and made contractions begin, although doctors managed to hold off Theo's birth for another week when he was delivered via caesarean.

Theo after his birth, when Toni Lea was able to take pain medication once again. Photo / Media Drum World/Australscope
Theo after his birth, when Toni Lea was able to take pain medication once again. Photo / Media Drum World/Australscope

"When I was pregnant, the pain wasn't too bad at first but from week five it got increasingly worse," she said.

"I took as many walks as I could to distract myself and used heat packs. One day at 35 weeks, I was folding clothes in the nursery and pain quickly took hold of my face. I made my way downstairs to get my heat pack, but I couldn't think clearly.

"I started to fall down the full flight of stairs and at the bottom I instantly started to cramp. The fall pushed the baby right down into my pelvis.

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"A few days later I started having contractions, and I had to have an early c-section at 36 weeks because of the fall and my pain. Theo was born on April 13, 2017.

"Straight after his birth I was able to start taking pain medication again, but because of this I was unable to breastfeed."

Toni Lea didn't want to sacrifice being a mum for the condition which took over her life in 2010. Photo / Media Drum World/Australscope
Toni Lea didn't want to sacrifice being a mum for the condition which took over her life in 2010. Photo / Media Drum World/Australscope

Lawrence shares her journey on Instagram @motherhood_by_tonilea to raise awareness for TN and inspire hope in others.

"I would love to have more children, but my pain has got so bad over the last few years that it would be impossible for me to cope without medication. I had radiation earlier this year and I feel like it's made my pain so much worse, so it's out of the question unfortunately," she said.

"Never give up on your dream, I always wanted to be a mum and it happened. When you have a condition like this, just take one day at a time. It's tough and you find yourself asking how on earth you're going to be able to keep putting up with this amount of pain, but you wake up the next day and you do it."

Where to get help:
• Lifeline: 0800 543 354 (available 24/7)
• Suicide Crisis Helpline: 0508 828 865 (0508 TAUTOKO) (available 24/7)
• Youthline: 0800 376 633
• Kidsline: 0800 543 754 (available 24/7)
• Whatsup: 0800 942 8787 (1pm to 11pm)
• Depression helpline: 0800 111 757 (available 24/7)
• Rainbow Youth: (09) 376 4155
• Samaritans 0800 726 666
• If it is an emergency and you feel like you or someone else is at risk, call 111.

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