coach aviator glasses doudoune coach pas cher paris femme france

coach aviator glasses looked terrible and ready to collapse. She helped me to a therapy room."My husband came and took me home. I went to bed, lay in the dark, and didn't move. Two hours later, I started coughing up an immense amount of blood."I hate hospitals and didn't want to go but my husband Jamie found me covered in blood and phoned 999."By the time the ambulance arrived, Allison had lost consciousness and was suffering from what is known as a catecholamine crisis, caused by adrenal glands flooding her body with excessive amounts of adrenaline and non adrenaline.She admits: "I don't remember leaving the house and I don't have much memory at all of that day."Tests were carried out at Perth Royal Infirmary before Allison was transferred to the high dependency unit at Ninewells Hospital in Dundee. There she was hooked up to heart monitors and other machines.Consultants thought Allison had a clot in her lung or had had a heart attack. But as each test came back negative, they admitted they were struggling with a diagnosis.Allison, whose husband Jamie is a GP, revealed: "They told us they didn't have a clue what was going on."It was during an MRI scan that a tumour was discovered on one of Allison's adrenal glands, which sit above the kidneys. The procedure did not go smoothly.Allison added: "I collapsed in the scanner. Within seconds, the crash team were there."Once I came round, the consultant told me my adrenal gland showed up 'very abnormal' in the scan, that I had a very rare tumour called a pheochromocytoma, and that all my other symptoms made sense. But he said it's such a rare tumour, they never