Mother-of-two left with a broken neck after huge YAWN: 'I had a 50/50 chance of survival'
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A woman suffered a broken neck following a powerful yawn, which not only posed a threat to her life but also led to a series of events pushing her family into homelessness.

Mother-of-two Hayley Black, 36, a former emergency call handler from Milton Keynes shared the frightening ordeal, which happened in 2016, on TikTok.

Mrs. Black recounted that she yawned and stretched instinctively after seeing her newborn, Amelia, do the same while waiting for her bottle. However, the ‘excruciating pain’ she felt immediately afterward indicated something was amiss.

She said: ‘Most people start their day with a big yawn and you’d never expect it to end up the way it did.

She shared, ‘Yawns tend to be contagious. I woke up at 5am, saw my daughter yawning, and naturally did the same as I prepared to fix her bottle.

‘I felt this immediate electric shock sensation go through half my body and I jumped up in shock.’ 

‘My arm froze in the air, accompanied by electric shock sensations. It felt like a seizure affecting one side of my body, and I knew something was terribly wrong right away.’

Panic setting in, asked her husband, Ian, 39, to call an ambulance—but he thought she was just panicking for nothing. 

Hayley Black has been left with a scar on her neck from the life-saving operation

Hayley Black has been left with a scar on her neck from the life-saving operation

The mother-of-two will need pain medication for life

The mother-of-two will need pain medication for life

Hayley Black wearing a protective neck brace in the hospital with her new born baby Amelia

Hayley Black wearing a protective neck brace in the hospital with her new born baby Amelia

Mrs Black added: ‘I said to my husband “you need to call an ambulance; something’s happened to my neck”. 

Her husband initially brushed it off, saying, “It’s 5am, you haven’t done anything; you’re alright.” But she insisted something was seriously wrong, prompting him to prepare the baby’s bottle and call for an ambulance.

‘I remember the journey to the hospital being excruciatingly painful and they had me in head blocks.’

Once at hospital, scans didn’t reveal anything of concern, leaving medical staff baffled by Mrs Black’s ongoing symptoms. 

Describing her ordeal, she stated, ‘I spent the night screaming from the pain, using gas and air to cope. The pain was so intense I tried hitting my head to lose consciousness.’

‘Nobody was listening to me and I was like “something is seriously wrong”. The nurses were getting frustrated with me and said “there’s nothing on the scans, you’re okay”.

‘[But then] the doctors did some tests and the surgeon said “this is worse than what we thought”. I was completely paralysed down my right-hand side.

‘It was crazy. The C6 and C7 had shot forwards into my spine when I yawned [due to] the force of the yawn. They said it was such a freak incident.’ 

After the surgery her husband Ian Black became her carer while looking after their newborn

After the surgery her husband Ian Black became her carer while looking after their newborn

She was mum to a newborn when the freak incident happened

She was mum to a newborn when the freak incident happened 

There are seven cervical vertebrae at the top of the spine which support the skull and connect it with the rest of the body. The vertebrae which Mrs Black had dislodged are associated with the nerves needed for the movement of the upper limbs. 

After watching her be anaesthetised, Mrs Black’s mother was given the heartbreaking news that there was a 50/50 chance that her daughter wouldn’t survive the emergency surgery, and if she did come round from the delicate procedure, the same odds were given for if she would ever walk again. 

A doctor, claims Mrs Black, later told her that her low chance of survival was connected to her having low oxygen levels before she was taken to the operating theatre. 

Fortunately the emergency surgery—known medically as a discectomy and fusion—was successful. 

‘I woke up and they’d restored all functions which was amazing. I’m so lucky but I’m still really traumatised,’ said Mrs Black.

‘I can’t yawn without panic and any yawn I try to stifle—it still affects me to this day.

‘I thank [the surgeons] everyday with the fact I’m here to be with my children and do the things that I can do.

‘The fact I’m not in [a wheelchair] is a miracle and I’m eternally grateful.’

Hayley Black with her husband Ian Black and their children Archie, 5, and Amelia, 9

Hayley Black with her husband Ian Black and their children Archie, 5, and Amelia, 9

Doctors told Mrs Black's mother she had a 50/50 chance of survival

Doctors told Mrs Black’s mother she had a 50/50 chance of survival 

The recovery has been gruelling for both Mrs Black and her devoted husband—who became her carer in the months after the freak incident—and her days are marred by excruciating nerve pain, and a new diagnosis of fibromyalgia.    

Fibromyalgia is a long-term condition that can cause pain throughout the body as well as other symptoms like fatigue, difficulty sleeping and concentration issues. 

Mrs Black had to re-learn how to walk, and was in a wheelchair for months. 

She has also been left with a tracheal scar from where doctors operated. 

‘The recovery was a long one physically and emotionally. It took me a long time to get my head round it,’ she said

‘My husband became almost essentially a single parent and my carer overnight. 

‘It was really hard and we became homeless over it.

‘I’m still struggling from the nerve damage today. I often get pains going down my arms, shooting down my back and up into my neck and my head.

Mrs Black with baby Amelia and her husband Ian

Mrs Black with baby Amelia and her husband Ian 

‘If I don’t take the medication then every time I take a step I get electrical shocks all up my spine and through into my head.’

Breaking her neck has also taken a huge financial toll on the Black family. 

Mrs Black explained: ‘I keep trying to go back to work and I end up having so much time off sick that I end up losing the job or walking away. 

‘I can’t go and do exercise classes or run around with the children.’

Now she wants to warn others of the dangers of this happening to them and urge people to advocate for themselves.

‘I’m not the only one who’s had these freak incidents happen. It’s so delicate in that area, people don’t realise,’ she said.

‘The one thing I have taken from it is to be grateful for the small. Being chronically ill now because of it means I am so grateful for the good days, for the small moments, for being able to walk and for being here with my children and husband.

‘For anyone going through chronic pain or healing from an injury or event that despite society’s pressure, you get to heal in your own raw messy way, and you get to struggle because it’s hard and life changing.

‘You don’t have to be a hero or an inspiration—you get through each day how you can get through the best.

‘Finally advocate for yourself and trust your instincts, you know when something is seriously wrong.’

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