The carer, from Glasgow, says her reconstruction left her with fatigue and anxiety as she awaits surgery.
A Scottish mom said she feels like “dying slow death” because of her breast implant, amid warnings hundreds of women suffer from the same issue.
The 57-year-old says she has been suicide due to Bii implant disease-an umbrella for implant health problems that are not recognized medical diagnosis in the United Kingdom. He spoke as an expert on Scottish surgery, he told the records of hundreds of women faced the same test with little NHS support.
BII sufferers say symptoms include brain fog, joint pain, fatigue and anxiety, with the S Club 7 Star Hannah Spearritt to reveal its own battle before. But some doctors continue to dispute if any.
Mom, who had a breast reconstruction of the NHS 20 years ago after removing the tracks, said in a record she only learned about BII last year after suffering. But it does not have the luxury of having its implants to go out privately and feared a long wait for removal surgery through NHS.
The caregiver, from Glasgow, said: “I have chronic fatigue, head from head to finger and my anxiety is through the roof, I feel like an old woman.
“I had a 17cm bladder under my ovaries and although my belly was removed it looks like I’m pregnant. I didn’t believe for a second that it would be under my implants six months ago.
“Because nothing appears in my blood tests, this is not a proven thing and I feel as if I do not take seriously, I phoned the NHS 24 and the Samaritans the other night because I felt I could not go on this way, I feel like dying slow death.
Mom, who does not want to be named because of her poor health, had a breast reconstruction in 2005 and when she began her symptoms, she put her in her age. They became more serious and during the lock, her stomach swelled, leading to the bladder found.
Six months ago she found an online support team with nearly 200,000 members worldwide and said the stories were sharing that they were strikingly similar to her own.
He said: “No man over my years told me he could be a bii. My doctor had not heard it, except for Facebook teams, there seems to be no immediate help or support and anyone to talk about it.
“Before the implants I was completely healthy and I never needed a doctor.”
A NHS Lanarkshire breast surgeon has now written Mom to agree to remove her implants, but the adviser said he “will not be able to prove or deny” bii because there are no “diagnostic criteria or test”. He now waits to find out how long he will wait.
He said, “Crying the phone at the doctor almost every week. It affects my whole life.” In 2002, the British Association of Aesthetic Plastic Surgeons said there was no “proven relationship between implants and any systemic disease”, although about 50 % of those who identify themselves that they have the BII to feel that their symptoms improve after removal.
In 2002, the S Club’s Hannah made a documentary that said it was “serious concern” and “felt like dying” and “slowly poisoned” before removing its implants. Gill Baird, owner and chief executive of Cosmetic Surgery Specialist Cosmedicare, said her staff had removed implants from women complaining about BII six times in the last year.
Only two relocations associated with the implants placed by the company have been made since 2016. The OP can cost £ 6500.
The Cosmetics Boss Said: “There are two sides of the debate when it is to bii. The side that our surgeons tend to leave on is that if a patient Feels they are hating sympptoms that Could Potentila. Choice as to what those implants should be removed.
“The amount of women who have been presenting (bii) over the last six years have been quite consistent, but what I would say is when there has been a connection to the BII, none of them have solved the implant. They were happy with their choice.



