Dawn
Systemic vasculitis affected Dawn’s ears, nose and eyes. She needed a major operation to repair her collapsed nose. Dawn is keen that doctors and nurses have support and training to recognise vasculitis so it can be treated before further damage is done.
Dawn’s vasculitis has been in remission without medication for two years, but she lives with the effects of the disease and its treatments. She welcomes every opportunity to highlight her story in the hope that other people will get a diagnosis and the right treatment before irreversible damage is done.
Dawn’s problem started in 2007 with ear, nose and flu-like symptoms and pain which didn’t get better. This was frustrating as she had previously been healthy. She was treated for allergies but things escalated over the next two years to include headaches, sweats, hearing loss, tinnitus, a changed sense of taste, and fatigue.
By this point Dawn says she looked like she had been punched in the face. At night she would bang her head with the pain and cry in the bathroom so the kids wouldn’t hear.
In 2009 she recalls going to hospital three times in an effort to get adequate pain relief and demandin a nose biopsy as the allergy treatments weren’t working. Meantime the bridge of her nose collapsed, changing her appearance even more.
Dawn feels that the appointment where she learnt she had vasculitis was handled with no bedside manner whatsoever She recalls being sent home with more medication and a leaflet. Her vasculitis is now called granulomatosis with polyangiitis (GPA), but at that time was described as limited; because her kidneys were not affected.
Although devastated, Dawn tried to get on with life and keep a sense of normality. Throughout her illness, Dawn continued working as a learning support assistant and appreciated the support of occupational health with reduced hours and time to attend medical appointments.
As Dawn had lost trust in her local healthcare professionals, members of an online vasculitis support group encouraged her to ask for a referral to a specialist service in another part of the country. From the first visit, Dawn has found the journey worthwhile, as she feels so well looked after. All her appointments are in the same hospital, she can access all test results and letters online, and she can ring at any time. This gives her confidence that she won’t get lost in the system
Dawn continued with different immunosuppressive treatments while the specialist centre went through a lengthy process of getting funding approval from her local health area to use the drug rituximab. After two years in remission she had a five-hour operation to take cartilage from her ear and repair her nose and can now breathe through one nostril.
Looking back, Dawn feels sad that the journey to a diagnosis and effective treatment was so long and tough. For eight of the 17 years she worked as a learning support assistant, there are no photos of her with her colleagues and the children, as she was too embarrassed by her appearance. She feels the counselling she received through her role as a carer has helped her come to terms with the disease and its impact, as has taking part in research and teaching.