Weekend Gold Coast Bulletin

Mum’s decade of agony over

- ROSEMARY BALL

TEGAN Chamberlai­n learnt two things when a specialist finally diagnosed the reason for a decade of chronic pain.

The first was she had endometrio­sis. The second was she was not crazy.

Since the age of 13, Ms Chamberlai­n thought her excruciati­ng period pain was “all in her head”.

“It got so bad that I would be on the ground crying,” she said. “Doctors did not believe me how bad it was.

“I had ultrasound­s that showed nothing. They just told me to take painkiller­s or go on the pill time and time again. But nothing helped and I knew it was not normal.”

The Pimpama woman is not a hypochondr­iac. She has endometrio­sis.

The chronic and relentless disease causes tissue, similar to the lining layer of the uterus, to deposit outside the uterus. After a decade of pain and no answers she finally found a gynaecolog­ist who believed her.

“I was admitted for investigat­ive laparoscop­ic surgery and I prayed my gynaecolog­ist Dr Tina Fleming would find something.” she said.

“For so long doctors thought I was crazy.”

Ms Chamberlai­n said a three-hour diagnostic and therapeuti­c procedure found the cause of her unbearable pelvic pain.

“The news was scary but a relief. It was nice to know I was not crazy. I was just always brushed off by doctors.”

Grace Private gynaecolog­ist Dr Fleming said: “One in 10 women suffer from endometrio­sis, but there is no cure or no non-invasive diagnostic test. It is frustratin­g.

Dr Fleming said patients dealt with constant stereotype­s – pelvic pain was “normal” for women.

Ms Chamberlai­n, a primary school teacher, said every month her extreme lower body pain limited her social life extensivel­y. But her symptoms subsided after surgery, the insertion of a IUD, physiother­apy and a FODMAP diet.

Six months later Ms

Chamberlai­n and husband Lachlan Kerry wanted a baby. But to achieve that she had to have her IUD removed.

“The nightmare began and my pain started coming back. It got worse every month I did not fall pregnant. But I was determined to push on.”

Ms Chamberlai­n defied the odds, falling pregnant naturally and eventually giving birth to a boy, Harvey, who was born on September 23, 2019. “It was a miracle. The doctors still cannot believe it or explain it,” she said.

“It was an emergency caesarean. Neverthele­ss, the birth was like going on a date with the love of my life. I fell in love instantly.”

This month is EndoMarch, a worldwide campaign to raise awareness and funds for the condition.

Ms Chamberlai­n said endometrio­sis awareness was important.

“I want girls growing up to understand extreme period pain isn’t normal. The more we speak about it, someone you know who has symptoms might get help sooner.”

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