A mother-of-one who suffers from a rare genetic condition that made her feel like a ‘dinosaur’ is on her feet again thanks to a risky, yet life-changing surgery.
Brooke Schilling, 37, was diagnosed with a genetic condition in 2001 that caused her spine to protrude which put her in constant excruciating pain and made it impossible for her to stand straight or move without a walker.
After the birth of her daughter Sophia in 2013, the New Yorker’s condition worsened and she underwent surgery in 2016 with the help of robots that could have left her paralyzed.
The operation was successful and Now Brooke is able to go to the gym, walk down the street without people staring and most importantly, raise her four-year-old daughter.
Brooke Schilling, 37, suffers from a rare genetic disorder that causes tumors to form on nerve tissue and her spine to protrude
The mother-of-one from New York could not walk, stand up straight be a mom to her daughter, she said
Brooke and her husband Matthew, 36, had to move in with her in-laws to help raise their daughter Sophia, four, because Brooke was in constant excruciating pain
Brooke suffers from neurofibromatosis, a genetic disorder which causes cancerous and noncancerous tumors to form on nerve tissue and spinal deformities.
The condition is caused by a spontaneous gene mutation and affects about one in 3,000 people. There is no cure.
In 2001 Brooke had a cancerous tumor removed and was left with a ‘hole’ in her hip to clean the area.
She lived normally, until the birth of her daughter in 2013 left her tilting slightly to the left when she walked.
Then in 2016 her condition suddenly worsened.
Brooke’s spine became so bent that she ‘looked like a hunchback’ and said doctors wouldn’t touch her with a ’10 foot pole’ for fear of causing more damage.
‘It was hard for me to walk and things just kept getting worse and worse and I was leaning more and more forward and becoming more contracted,’ Brooke said.
‘I can’t even explain the amount of pain I was in. It was mind-blowing. It was awful,’ she added.
She and her husband Matthew, 36, had to move into her in-laws’ home because Brooke could barely take care of her then-three-year-old daughter.
‘Other than loving her, hanging out and cuddling, I could do nothing for her. I basically missed a year of her life doing things like taking her to pre-school,’ Brooke said. ‘ I wasn’t able to be her mom.’
She had also lost weight, was wearing braces and at the lowest points was left thinking ‘Is it worth even living?’
Brooke met with an orthopedic surgeon at New York Presbyterian Hospital and underwent risky spinal reconstruction surgery in 2016 that could have left her paralyzed
The surgery was successful and now Brooke can go to the gym, stand tall and most importantly raise her daughter
Brooke then met with Dr Ronald Lehman, a surgeon and professor of orthopedic surgery at New York Presbyterian Hospital.
He told the former-receptionist that she required complex spine reconstruction surgery.
‘This was an extremely unusual case in that her spine was dislocated,’ Dr Lehman said. ‘This is one of the most rare presentations for spinal pathology.’
Brooke underwent the risky surgery in April 2016.
The procedure – which relies on a robot to help place screws and rods in the back – can leave patients paralyzed if it goes wrong.
‘The procedure was very unusual in that we had to stabilize her spine as she was unable to even sit up. She was completely bent over and unable to care for herself,’ Dr Lehman said.
The operation was successful and after undergoing hip surgery and re-learning how to walk, Brooke is now on the road to recovery.
She said: ‘I was nervous that I wouldn’t be able to move again but at that point I was basically paralyzed anyway.’
Brooke is now able to do ‘normal mom’ things with Sophia, who is now four.
She said: ‘Now here I am in January 2018, standing up with a straight back, going to the gym and looking after my four-year-old daughter.’
‘Now I’m able to go on rides at theme parks, wear a bathing suit and walking past people in the street without them staring.’
Brooke calls Dr Lehmen her ‘angel’ and said that now if people stare at her walking down the street they’re not thinking ‘oh look at that poor thing’.