“It was like an alarm going off in my body,” Marta said.
At 33, she wasn’t sleeping for days at a time. Her anxiety was overwhelming, and her mood swings so intense she felt like a “hormonal teenager”.
“Everything felt off, everything felt wrong,” she told Mamamia.
And that’s when she went to the doctor.
Given she was unhappy with her job, the doctor thought she might have depression. But Marta knew it wasn’t depression.
Since she was 17, Marta had lived with Hashimoto’s disease (hypothyroidism, also called an under active thyroid). She would always know it was playing up because her hair would start falling out, or her hands would become painfully dry.
But this, she recalled, was different.
Her mother – who also lives with the disease – asked doctors to check her thyroid antibodies, a more complex test.
When her results came in, the doctor’s eyes widened. They were off the charts.
She was sent to an ultrasound, and then to an oncologist. It was thyroid cancer.
LISTEN: What it’s like to discover you have the breast cancer gene. Post continues below.
After a horrid surgery, the tumour came out in one go. The pain was indescribable.
“I’ve never forgotten that feeling, that ‘alarm’. You know when something is wrong,” she said.
“You just know. So listen.”
Marta was one of four women who spoke to Mamamia about the signs that something was wrong, prior to their cancer diagnosis.