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MATT PARTINGTON, 27, WAS LEFT PARALYSED FROM THE WAIST DOWN FOLLOWING SURGERY HANNAH COTTRELL PA REAL LIFE and LIV CLARKE Tourism writer 10:10, 30 Dec 2024 A young chef who noticed his legs
becoming “weak and wobbly” has been left paralysed from the waist down after having surgery for a rare spinal abnormality. Matt Partington, 27, visited his GP after he noticed strange
sensations in his legs in February. After he went to A&E at King’s College Hospital in London for an MRI scan in July, it was discovered Matt had a rare blood vessel abnormality in his
spine called spinal arteriovenous malformation (AVM). He underwent spinal surgery the following month and, while he was warned of the risks the operation posed, he claimed his surgeon told
him it “would be a complete success”. However, when he awoke, he discovered he was paralysed from the surgery site downwards because of a spinal cord injury. While physiotherapy has allowed
Matt to regain small movements in his left leg, left foot and right toes, it is “too early to tell” if he will ever make a full recovery and walk again. A statement from King’s College
Hospital said they will monitor his progress and he “may continue to regain function in his legs”. Matt now uses a wheelchair and the ordeal has prompted him to launch a GoFundMe page to
help fundraise for neurological physiotherapy and equipment, raising more than £11,000 to date. “The symptoms I’d been having were probably set in stone due to the nerve damage but in terms
of the operation, they thought it would be a complete success,” Matt told PA Real Life. “I think about how life will be down the line but mostly I miss the things I loved, like walking on
the beach after swimming, dancing all night at a festival and kicking a football around with mates in summer. You go through all these weird different emotions … I’m just really frustrated
this happened.” Matt who lived in Crystal Palace, south London, but has now moved back in with his parents, Nick and Roisin, both 59, on the Isle of Wight, first experienced strange
sensations in his legs in February. His legs felt “weak” while working as a chef at a burger restaurant in Covent Garden, London. Matt said: “I started to feel this weird weakness in my
legs, like 50 per cent of the muscles had been sucked out. I could still stand and walk but my legs felt a bit wobbly.” The feelings would last for around 30 minutes then dissipate, so he
“didn’t think too much of it”. But over the next few months the duration and frequency increased. “It felt like my legs weren’t working properly – I couldn’t walk very fast or get up the
stairs,” Matt said. He was also experiencing urinary hesitancy leading him to become “really worried” he may have prostate cancer. Matt booked an appointment at his GP surgery in June and
was booked in for a blood test. In the meantime, however, his doctor noticed on his medical records he had complained of lower back pain around four years ago – which was later thought to be
attributed to the spinal AVM. “I’d always had lower back pain, it’s never been that bad and has always been quite sporadic – I can always get up and go on with my day,” Matt explained. Matt
said because of this, his doctor wanted to send him for an MRI scan at his nearest hospital, King’s College Hospital in Camberwell, London, and he went to A&E. There, Matt had three
scans on his bladder and an MRI. “The good news is they thought they knew what it was, the bad news was they had found an abnormality in my back,” Matt said. Matt received his diagnosis on
July 29 of a spinal AVM, a rare condition where a tangle of blood vessels form on, in or near the spinal cord, according to the NHS. “I didn’t know what an AVM was and I was completely
delirious at that point,” he said. He was admitted for further tests before he was booked in for surgery – which involved disconnecting the blood supply to the damaged veins to reduce the
risk it was posing to his spinal cord. His operation was scheduled for August 5 and the weekend before, Matt was able to leave the hospital. He spent time with his friends and family before
he returned – not knowing this would be the last time he would be able to walk. When he awoke from the surgery, Matt found he was paralysed from the injury site down. “Initially when I woke
up I was still pretty out of it, I don’t think I really understood what happened the first day,” he said. “I remember I kept thinking, ‘I’m going to wake up tomorrow and my legs are going to
work’.” Matt said he was told he had suffered a spinal cord injury during the operation. “My lead surgeon seemed pretty down about the fact my legs weren’t working – his reaction wasn’t a
good one,” he said. “He didn’t say a lot, he just seemed pretty disappointed.” Matt said the first few days were “really hard” but after a few weeks, he was able to transfer himself from his
bed to his wheelchair independently. He completed a three-month physiotherapy scheme at King’s College Hospital before he was transferred to The London Spinal Cord Injury Centre in Stanmore
for a further six weeks. Matt was able to return to his parents’ house on the Isle of Wight on December 3 and he continues to have physiotherapy once a week. “You get home and it all gets
really real, what’s happened,” Matt said. “You’re no longer around specialists who know what they are doing – it’s just you on your own.” Matt is now able to move his left leg, bringing it
in and out and bending it, as well as his left foot and the toes on his right foot. As far as the rest of his progression goes, he said he has been told it is “too early to tell”. “I’m still
super positive, I’m still doing everything I can, it’s a waiting game,” he said. “If they hadn’t caught it, they told me I would have gone paralysed from the waist down anyway. “It getting
caught when it did might end up meaning I have a chance of walking again.” Matt has launched a GoFundMe page to help raise money for further neurological physiotherapy and equipment, such as
a motorised wheelchair, which has raised more than £11,000 to date. In a statement, King’s College Hospital NHS Foundation Trust said: “We are sorry to hear that Mr Partington is not happy
with the care he received. “As with all patients undergoing planned surgery, Mr Partington underwent a detailed consultation with his clinical team prior to his operation, in which he was
informed about the risks of surgery, including the potential for spinal cord or spinal nerve damage. “He also had extensive discussions with the treating team after surgery to explain the
outcome and his prognosis. Our teams are committed to supporting patients before, during and after surgery, and we will continue to monitor Mr Partington’s progress. He may continue to
regain function in his legs.” Article continues below To find out more, visit Matt’s fundraising page here. FOR MORE OF TODAY'S TOP STORIES, CLICK HERE.