
‘Fit and healthy' man, 31, given years to live reveals the first sign of killer that he blamed on ‘working long hours'
A FIT and healthy weightlifter chalked up red flag symptoms to "working long hours" and "not drinking enough water" - but was given just years to live after a terrifying seizure landed him in a coma.
Scott Hinch, 31, led a fit and active lifestyle and had no significant health problems - aside from "experiencing a few headaches and nosebleeds".
10
10
But on his way to work on August 19, 2019, he suffered a seizure and was rushed to Nevill Hall Hospital in Abergavenny, Monmouthshire, Wales.
He was put in an induced four-day coma after the seizures continued for 45 minutes.
After waking up, an MRI revealed a grade 2 astrocytoma - a type of tumour that usually develops in the brain or spinal cord - and he was given just three to five years to live.
Scott realised the headaches and nosebleeds he'd experienced over the last few months were in fact warnings signs of the cancer.
On September 4, Scott underwent emergency surgery to partially remove the tumour and started aggressive radiotherapy and chemotherapy to keep the cancer at bay.
But despite its initial success, Scott's cancer returned two years later, at the end of 2023, and he began his second round of treatment - which involved 20 months' worth of intensive chemotherapy, condensed into 10.
He is now undergoing his third round of treatment for his tumour and says he suffers from "relentless fatigue" and that he is "dependent" on his mum, Fiona Lott, 51, because he "can't leave the house most days".
Scott, who worked as a solar engineer from Abergavenny, Wales, said: "Looking back, I now realise there were signs.
"Headaches, nosebleeds, things I chalked up to long work hours.
"Maybe heavy training at the gym and not drinking enough water.
"I even went to the opticians, but nothing was picked up.
"Most days, I can't leave the house.
"But I'm still here, and that's something I'm grateful for."
Scott was diagnosed with a grade 2 astrocytoma after suffering a seizure on his way to work on August 19, 2019.
10
10
Although the general prognosis is good - people with a grade 1 have a 96 per cent chance of survival after five years - it can decrease to below 30 per cent for those with grade 3 or higher.
Scott woke from a four-day coma induced coma when a consultant told him the "devastating" news that he had three to five years to live.
"I had no memory of anything since leaving the house," he said.
"I had four days completely missing, I remember setting off for work and then waking up in the hospital with doctors and nurses over my bed.
"It was frightening.
"I was shocked and scared and didn't know what was going on."
Symptoms of astrocytoma
Astrocytoma is a common type of primary brain tumour, which means it starts in the brain instead of spreading there.
Astrocytomas start in stem cells, which eventually develop in to one of the different types of brain cells, such as astroctyes.
Astrocytes are brain cells that connect and support nerve cells in the brain and spinal cord.
As astrocytes are found throughout the brain, astrocytomas can occur in many different areas of the brain.
These tumours grow from cells that are vital in processing information in the brain, so they can disrupt the function of whichever area of the brain they are growing in.
Some of these tumours grow in the cerebellum, which controls balance.
They can also occur in the optic pathways, which are involved in sight.
So, symptoms can be very different between people affected by these tumours. That being said, common astrocytoma symptoms could include:
Headaches
Difficulty speaking
Change in vision, like double vision or blurriness
Cognitive difficulties, like trouble thinking or remembering
Seizures (epilepsy)
Source: The Brain Tumour Charity
The consultant at the University Hospital of Wales, in Cardiff, Wales, explained to Scott and his family that due to the tumour's diffused nature, only part of it could be safely removed.
The procedure took place on September 4 and Scott recalled being "terrified".
"But I woke up a couple of hours later, cracked a joke, and asked for a cup of tea," he said.
"It was a relief to know my brain function was intact."
'Relentless fatigue'
After the surgery, Scott went through 16 "gruelling" months of therapy - including seven weeks of radiotherapy and 12 cycles of chemotherapy - which kept things stable for two years.
But a routine scan towards the end of 2023 revealed the tumour was active again and Scott started his second round of treatment with intensive chemotherapy - with no success in curing the cancer.
"I take it one month at a time," he said.
"The fatigue is relentless and most days I can't leave the house."
His mum, Fiona, became his full-time carer and was "dependent on her" for everything.
During this time, the 31-year-old had lost his driving licence as a result of his seizures and sold his car.
"I felt like losing my independence," he said.
"I couldn't visit friends, and the risk of infection meant limited visitors.
"I felt incredibly isolated."
10
10
'Still here'
Five years later, Scott is still battling cancer and is now undergoing his third round of treatment.
But he remains determined.
"I'm still here, and that's something I'm grateful for," he said.
To help raise awareness, his mum, Fiona, and auntie, Lyndsey, are taking on the 200k in May Your Way challenge to raise money for the Brain Tumour Research Charity.
Fiona said: "Watching my son go through the trauma of surgery and three rounds of treatment for brain cancer has been heartbreaking.
"No family should have to experience the fear, uncertainty and pain that we have.
"We need better outcomes, kinder treatments, and ultimately a cure.
"If our efforts can help spare just one family from this suffering, then every step will be worth it."
You can support Fiona and Lyndsey's 200k In May Your Way challenge here.
10
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Daily Mail
5 hours ago
- Daily Mail
A-ha frontman Morten Harket, 65, diagnosed with Parkinson's disease and doesn't know if he can sing anymore as band writes 'he has been battling his own body' in recent years
A-ha frontman Morten Harket has revealed he has Parkinson's disease. Parkinson's is a progressive brain disorder caused by the death of nerve cells in the brain that produce dopamine. In a statement on the band's website, Morten, 65, said he had undergone several rounds of brain surgery and that he was managing the symptoms of the disease, but admitted he had been 'battling his own body' in recent years. It read: 'This isn't the sort of news anyone wants to deliver to the world, but here it is: Morten has Parkinson's disease.' Morten also said he had initially kept the degenerative condition private but has now decided to tell fans and didn't know if he could sing or even perform again. He said: 'I've got no problem accepting the diagnosis. With time I've taken to heart my 94-year-old father's attitude to the way the organism gradually surrenders: "I use whatever works" From A-list scandals and red carpet mishaps to exclusive pictures and viral moments, subscribe to the Daily Mail's new showbiz newsletter to stay in the loop. 'Part of me wanted to reveal it. Like I said, acknowledging the diagnosis wasn't a problem for me; it's my need for peace and quiet to work that has been stopping me. 'I'm trying the best I can to prevent my entire system from going into decline. 'It's a difficult balancing act between taking the medication and managing its side effects. 'There's so much to weigh up when you're emulating the masterful way the body handles every complex movement, or social matters and invitations, or day-to-day life in general.' He told the band's biographer Jan Omdahl that he has been making the most of advanced technology in treating the disease and has been using a method called deep brain stimulation. His neurologist in Norway is Dr Christina Sundal at NeuroClinic Norway, and she was previously a research fellow with the Parkinson's team at the Mayo Clinic. He revealed he underwent a neurosurgical procedure called deep brain stimulation (DBS) in June 2024 in which electrodes were implanted into the left side of his brain and he responded well and many of his physical symptoms practically vanished. In December 2024 he underwent a similar procedure on the right side of his brain, which was also successful. His voice has changed with Parkinson's and told Jan: The problems with my voice are one of many grounds for uncertainty about my creative future.' He said: 'I don't really know [if I can sing anymore]. I don't feel like singing, and for me that's a sign. I'm broadminded in terms of what I think works; I don't expect to be able to achieve full technical control. 'The question is whether I can express myself with my voice. As things stand now, that's out of the question. But I don't know whether I'll be able to manage it at some point in the future.' Morten urged fans not to worry, telling them he is now 'going to listen to the professionals'. 'Spend your effort addressing real problems,' he said, 'and know that I am being taken care of. 'Be good servants to nature, the very basis of our existence, and care for the environment while it is still possible to do so. 'Don't worry about me. Find out who you want to be - a process than can be new each and every day.' The singer too revealed that he has been writing lyrics since his diagnosis, but that he's 'not sure' if he'll be able to finish and release them. Parkinson's can affect those diagnosed both physically and mentally. It primarily causes trouble to the brain, parts of which become progressively damaged over years with the disease. It usually affects those over 50, with a number of celebrities ultimately suffering with the disease in the past. Ozzy Osborne, Neil Diamond and Billy Connolly are all currently living with Parkinson's while Muhammad Ali was famously diagnosed just three years after the end of his illustrious boxing career. Doctors said of the heavyweight's illness following his 2016 death: 'Muhammad Ali's disease course, from his late 30s until his death at age 74 years, was chronic and progressive. 'He manifested fatigue hypophonia, bradykinesia, and a masked face, as well as many of the visible motor symptoms of Parkinons's disease.' As evidenced in the Ali case, the disease can in rare cases affect those under the age of 40. Famous US actor Michael J. Fox, 63, was diagnosed at just 29 years old in 1991. The Back To The Future star has spent much of the last 25 years trying to advance scientific research into the disease with his charity, The Michael J. Fox Foundation for Parkinson's Research. Formed in 1982 by Harket and his friends Paul Waaktaar-Savoy and Magne Furuholmen, A-ha saw a global breakthrough in 1985 with their debut album Hunting High and Low which yielded several hits such as Take On Me and The Sun Always Shines on TV. Take On Me was recently featured in the second season of HBO's hit series The Last of Us when the main character Ellie, played by Bella Ramsey, performed an acoustic version of the song. While world-renowned for their success in the 1980s, A-ha continued to release music throughout the 2000s with their latest work including albums such as Memorial Beach, Lifelines and Cast in Steel. Morten has six children, three with his former wife Camilla Malmquist Harket, a daughter with former girlfriend Anne Mette Undlien and another daughter with current partner Inez Andersson.


The Guardian
5 hours ago
- The Guardian
Switch on those glutes! Suddenly it's all about the bass, and for good reason
I'm staring at the screen, trying to write a joke. It involves a muscle called the gluteus maximus, Roman centurions and possibly a reference to Biggus somebody from Monty Python's Life of Brian. I've been sitting here for over an hour, so long that when I finally stand up I have to hobble and wobble a few steps before I can get my stride back. It's because my glutei maximi are a bit of a joke. I have spent so much of my life literally sitting on this Roman-sounding muscle, staring at screens, trying to think up killer first lines to stories that by middle-age this undernourished workhorse is vocalising its disappointment at my life choices. Everyone seems to be talking about glutes right now and it's not just some fad brought on by Kim Kardashian's internet-breaking bum. Fitness instructors tell us to 'switch on those glutes', or admonish us for having 'lazy' glutes or 'dead butt syndrome'; suddenly, it's all about the bass. And it's for good reason. The gluteal muscles are vital for getting us up and about, yet humanity's increasingly sedentary lifestyle and work are leading to neglect of our glute health, with potentially serious consequences for our overall health. Let's meet the triumvirate of the tush muscles: gluteus maximus, gluteus medius and gluteus minimus. Maximus is, as the name suggests, the big one that makes up what might colloquially be known as the butt cheek and which attaches at the back of the pelvis and at the side of the thigh bone. 'Glute max is largely responsible for extending your hips, so pushing your leg behind you,' says associate professor Angie Fearon, a physiotherapist at the University of Canberra. 'If you're standing up and you pushed your leg backwards, that would be that muscle … it pushes you forwards when you're walking, or running or hopping or skipping.' Gluteus medius and minimus take the leg out to the side and manage the rotational movement. These three muscles are vital in keeping the pelvis stable during walking, lifting the leg up and powering us forward. They are also a link from the core muscles in the stomach and the lower back down to the muscles of the legs. Weak gluteal muscles can lead to what Dr Charlotte Ganderton describes as a teapot-style gait, where people tilt their upper body from side to side over their hip as they walk. 'They're actually throwing their whole torso over their hip to be able to clear their foot through, and that obviously has significant consequences on the rest of your body and the joints that are further up from the hip, so the spine,' says Ganderton, a physiotherapist at RMIT and Alphington Sports Medicine in Melbourne. The real problem with neglected gluteal muscles is what they can lead to. 'If you don't have good functioning gluteal muscles, the actual hip joint is the one who takes on those forces,' Ganderton says. 'People that have hip pathology – so hip arthritis, lateral hip pain, which people call gluteal tendinopathy – we know that these individuals have poor hip strength, and they often have very poor hip control when we assess them in the clinic.' The two most common hip conditions that affect particularly older people are hip osteoarthritis and gluteal tendinopathy, which is sometimes also called greater trochanteric pain syndrome or bursitis. 'What we see in people with those conditions is they're often weaker in that area than an asymptomatic control group,' Fearon says. With gluteal tendinopathy, pain develops because weaker gluteal muscles leads people to overuse other muscles, which then cause irritation and inflammation of the tendons and muscles in the outer hip region. And for many, our sedentary lifestyle is to blame – it is very much a case of 'use it or lose it'. Even two weeks of sitting on our backsides with little to no activity can be enough to start deconditioning and diminishing of our muscles. Further on from that, 'the muscle no longer stays as muscle tissue, for the most part – it actually fills with fat and what we call fatty infiltrate', Ganderton says. And once that happens, it can be very challenging to reverse and rebuild the muscle. However the exercises to strengthen the gluteal muscles are actually pretty basic. The simplest one is called a 'gluteal bridge' and just involves lying on your back, planting the soles of your feet on the floor or bed and lifting your pelvis up off that surface. Or while you're lying down, roll on to your side and lift the upper leg upwards to about the width of your shoulders. Ganderton's own research in postmenopausal women with gluteal tendinopathy found that a simple standing exercise could also help. 'Standing on one leg where you've got both knees straight and you just lift up the opposite leg about a centimetre off the floor, so just weight shifting across uses a lot of muscle activity in the leg that's standing on the ground,' she says. For the more active and stable among us, Fearon also recommends squats and walking lunges, carrying weights if you're up to it. Even these simple exercises can make a big difference, Fearon says. 'Say you had 100 people with gluteal tendinopathy, in a large percentage of them, if you got them to do some specific strengthening work for the hip abductors, and you gave them some suitable education, they'd probably all improve or a large percentage of them would.' But at the most basic level, we just need to move more. 'There's really good evidence that shows that if you get up and move every 20 to 30 minutes – get up, do a few squats, go and get a glass of water, go to the photocopier, just get up and move – it actually sets off a whole lot of enzymes in your muscles, which is good,' she says. 'Your brain gets a break and overall you do better.'


BBC News
6 hours ago
- BBC News
Cryptosporidium: open farm day visitors warned over parasite risk
Tens of thousands of visitors due to attend a UK-wide open farm day this weekend have been warned about a parasitic infection that causes serious gastrointestinal were 17 outbreaks of cryptosporidiosis linked to farms in England and Wales in 2024 and an outbreak in south Wales earlier this year has seen dozens of people fall to inspection reports from the past five years - released to the BBC under the Freedom of Information Act - some farms repeatedly ignored health inspectors' advice and allowed children to handle sick animals in filthy organisers of Open Farm Sunday, which sees 190,000 visitors, said its farms have high health and safety standards. Cryptosporidium can cause severe stomach cramps, vomiting and diarrhoea and is spread through direct contact with animals or touching surfaces that have animal faeces on them. The young, pregnant women and those with health conditions which affect their immune system can be particularly Health Wales said individual cases of cryptosporidiosis linked to visits to Cowbridge Farm Shop at Marlborough Grange Farm in Cowbridge, Vale of Glamorgan, this spring had now risen to 89 England, one of those affected after a farm visit was Emily Fryer's six-year-old son was admitted to hospital after falling ill following a visit to Gannow Farm in Worcestershire last Fryer told the BBC: "He didn't eat or drink for about five days. He just slept all the time. His sugars were dangerously low and they admitted him. "Obviously, I was really worried then. Because he is autistic and non-verbal, we didn't really know how we could help him." Mrs Fryer said the family had taken hygiene seriously when they visited the farm and had washed their hands thoroughly using facilities provided on site. A year earlier the farm had been issued with a prohibition notice by the Health and Safety Executive because it was failing to prevent or control the risk of exposure to cryptosporidium. Those issues were dealt with and the farm was licensed to show animals to the public in Fryer said she was disappointed that the farm had been allowed to reopen to visitors."I just think it's awful," she owners of the farm, which has now stopped its open days, declined to comment when approached by the BBC but have previously said they had "made every precaution possible" to prevent an farms across the UK have had to diversify their businesses over recent years to boost their profitability, with public open days, petting farms and play barns becoming an important source of inspection reports released to the BBC under the Freedom Information Act by the UK's national cryptosporidium reference unit show that a small number of farms are not meeting health and safety standards - and, in extreme cases, are ignoring warnings from one farm in Wales, which was linked to a number of outbreaks, inspectors found sick animals kept on display and a lack of handwashing facilities, risk assessments and staff training. According to reports, the inspectors told the farm those failings were "consistent with those identified previously. This indicates you are failing to maintain the required improvements from one season to the next". Another farm visited in 2023 had also failed to implement recommendations from a previous inspection, which led to another outbreak of cryptosporidiosis, while another farm, due to host a school visit a few days after inspection, was found to be failing."Comparing current visit to last year found the conditions worse," the report noted. 'Huge task' The UK Health Security Agency (UKHSA) said the 16 outbreaks in England last year was a provisional figure and data analysis due to be published later in the month may see that Public Health Wales and the UKHSA have warned the estimated 190,000 visitors who will be visiting the 250 farms taking part in Open Farm Sunday this weekend to make sure they take basic hygiene Hatton, an education specialist for organisers of the open farm event LEAF (Linking Environment And Farming), said all its participating farmers were given advice and training on how best to keep visitors safe."We are supporting farmers to open their farms and with their risk assessments. We are on the phone with farmers checking in with them throughout the planning process and helping them to understand how to ensure that that visit goes smoothly and everyone goes home happy and healthy," she farm manager who says he is ensuring the highest health and safety standards for visitors on Sunday is Andy Bason, who will be welcoming around 2,000 visitors onto Newhouse Farm, Alresford, said LEAF's health and safety training had "really opened my eyes to what's needed to host this kind of event"."With the kind of numbers we see, it is a huge task. We want everyone to come here, have a great day and go home safe without any illness," he National Farmers' Union (NFU) said that the health and safety of all visitors to farms was "taken extremely seriously".