Updated
Updated · Manchester Evening News · Jul 8
Teen Danielle Andersen Partly Paralysed After 3 Blood Vessels Were Cut in Brain Tumour Surgery
Updated
Updated · Manchester Evening News · Jul 8

Teen Danielle Andersen Partly Paralysed After 3 Blood Vessels Were Cut in Brain Tumour Surgery

3 articles · Updated · Manchester Evening News · Jul 8

Summary

  • Danielle Andersen, 17, was left paralysed down her left side after a December 2025 craniotomy to remove a benign dermoid cyst, with doctors later finding she had suffered a stroke during the operation.
  • Three blood vessels were cut in surgery, according to an MRI scan four days later, after the family had initially been told her post-operative weakness would resolve within days.
  • The tumour was discovered after five days of severe headaches in July 2025, which Andersen had mistaken for dehydration during a heatwave before a consultant spotted unusual eye tracking in A&E.
  • Six months on, the London student has regained movement through intensive physiotherapy and family-led exercises, and has resumed running, jumping and some dancing after dropping out of her first college year.
  • King’s College Hospital said skull-base neurosurgery is highly complex and that risks were explained during consent, while the family is raising money for private rehabilitation beyond standard NHS stroke recovery support.

Insights

A teen dancer is learning to jump again after a stroke. Why must her family crowdfund the therapy needed for her to dance again?
Her brain surgery had 100-to-1 odds against complications. So what went catastrophically wrong?
To start her dream college, she delayed brain surgery. Was this decision a tragic mistake?