5 days ago
Tennis legend Monica Seles diagnosed with rare disease
Tennis great Monica Seles revealed she has been diagnosed with a rare muscle-weakening condition.
Seles, 51, started experiencing double vision and extremely depleted strength in her arms and legs in 2019, The Sun reports.
A long string of tests and scans - delayed by the Covid pandemic - ruled out brain tumours and motor neurone disease.
The nine-time Grand Slam champion was eventually diagnosed with myasthenia gravis (MG) in 2022.
Now Seles has gone public on neuromuscular auto-immune disease - which currently has no cure - and will raise awareness for the condition with an event around this month's US Open.
MG affects most of the body but particularly the muscles that control the eyes - although symptoms can vary from day to day.
Approximately 15-20 people per 100,000 - or 0.015 per cent of the population - are affected by MG, which sees the immune system attack the neuromuscular junction where nerves and muscles communicate.
'I would be playing (tennis) with some kids or family members, and I would miss a ball,' Seles told AP.
'I was like, 'Yeah, I see two balls.'
'These are obviously symptoms that you can't ignore.
'It took me quite some time to really absorb it, speak openly about it, because it's a difficult one.
'It affects my day-to-day life quite a lot.'
Seles won seven of her nine Grand Slams by the age of 18.
That included reaching eight Major finals in a row - winning seven - before she was tragically stabbed in April 1993 on court during a match in Hamburg by a fixated fan of Steffi Graf.
The Yugoslavia-born star - who switched nationality to USA - returned in 1995 after a two-year absence.
She reached the US Open final in her first Major since the stabbing then won the 1996 Australian Open, her ninth and final Grand Slam title.
The lefty, who played with a double-handed forehand and backhand, officially retired in 2008 five years after her final competitive match.
Now living in Florida, she told The Athletic about her MG diagnosis: 'I thought, 'OK, just push through it.'
'But a couple of instances happened when — on court and in daily life — I realised there was something going on.
'After coming out of my former country to the IMG Academy, I had to totally reset.
'When I became No1, it was a huge reset because everybody treats you differently.
'Then obviously when I got stabbed, that was a huge reset. And then when I was diagnosed, it was a huge reset.
'The day-to-day part of managing it, depending on my symptoms, is really adjusting, you know. I think anybody else who has Myasthenia Gravis knows it's a continuous adjustment.
'After my stabbing, I had to deal with that internally for quite a few years to process it and my MG diagnosis was kind of very similar.
'I had to understand my new normal of day-to-day life, what I can do work-wise and different things.'