The Scottish Mail on Sunday - You

HEAL TH by Sarah Stacey

- By Sarah Stacey

Known as the queen of endurance cycling, Jasmijn Muller, 37, a management consultant, believed she was the embodiment of health until a pain in her leg proved to be a deep vein thrombosis (DVT).

In May this year, I was recceing the route for my solo Land’s End to John O’Groats record attempt in 2017. The first three days were hot and I was cycling long distances at speed, so I became dehydrated. Then I got bad food poisoning and lost any remaining fluid in my body.

The next day, I felt weak and took the train, but continued cycling on days five and six. I returned home sitting in a train and a car, then spent two days working round the clock at my desk to catch up. So I had six days of relatively strenuous activity and dehydratio­n, followed by four days of sitting down.

At 11pm on day ten, I was sitting at my desk when I felt a strong cramping pain in my left calf, which continued despite rest and ice applicatio­n. My husband mentioned DVT, but I just laughed.

The next day, I was still in pain and feeling nauseous so I went to see my GP. There was no swelling or discolorat­ion and my risk profile apparently didn’t fit DVT, so she told me to rest. I knew the pain wasn’t just cramp so I insisted on being referred to hospital and she gave in.

Blood tests proved positive for a higher-than-normal clotting factor, which suggested a DVT, so I was sent home with an anticoagul­ant (heparin) to inject while I waited three days for a scan of my veins. It was a scary time, because I didn’t know what was going on or how to get reliable informatio­n.

An ultrasound of the deep veins of my left leg revealed one small clot in the popliteal vein behind the knee. I was prescribed a three-month course of oral anticoagul­ants to thin my blood. However, with this drug (rivaroxaba­n) there is no way to reverse the thinning if a serious bleed occurs, so I trained indoors on a sedentary bike because of the risk of injury outdoors.

I learned I actually had several risk factors for DVT, including taking the contracept­ive pill, which I have now stopped. I also sat working for hours, so have swapped to a standing Varidesk (uk.varidesk.com). I sip water with added electrolyt­es all day to avoid dehydratio­n.

It was a horrible time, but I was lucky. Now I want to raise awareness about the risks. Jasmijn recently took part in Revolve24, a 24-hour endurance event at Brands Hatch, Kent, where her team came fourth. She is now sponsored by Isobar Compressio­n, which makes custom-fit compressio­n garments to reduce the risk of DVT.

 ?? Email your questions to sarah@sarahstace­y.com ??
Email your questions to sarah@sarahstace­y.com
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