Model 'was left BLIND' after her battle with Crohn’s disease

A professional model and dancer has today told how it took doctors seven years to diagnose her with Crohn's disease.

Natalie-Amber Freegard, of Swindon, began suffering symptoms of the agonising digestive condition when she was 17.

Doctors repeatedly dismissed her stomach pains and extreme weight loss, which saw her plummet to just five stone, as anorexia.

It was only when her life was hanging in the balance and she was rushed to hospital for emergency surgery that surgeons revealed she had Crohn's.

Miss Freegard, now 27, was just 'hours away from dying' when she was taken in an ambulance, after collapsing at home and temporarily losing her sight.

Doctors found she had sepsis, when the body attacks its own organs in response to an infection. She believes it was responsible for her sight problem.

Miss Freegard pulled through the operation, despite her family being told to prepare for the worst. However, she was left with a stoma bag.  

Natalie-Amber Freegard was just 'hours away from dying' when she was rushed to hospital after collapsing and losing her sight at home. Now, Miss Freegard has taken part in a photoshoot to expose her scars and banish the stigma surrounding stoma bags

Natalie-Amber Freegard was just 'hours away from dying' when she was rushed to hospital after collapsing and losing her sight at home. Now, Miss Freegard has taken part in a photoshoot to expose her scars and banish the stigma surrounding stoma bags

Surgeons told her family to prepare for the worst, as they desperately battled to keep the now 27-year-old alive through two major operations (pictured in hospital in December 2017)

Surgeons told her family to prepare for the worst, as they desperately battled to keep the now 27-year-old alive through two major operations (pictured in hospital in December 2017)

Miss Freegard has now began working with a personal trainer to regain her strength, so she can return to dancing and modelling

Miss Freegard has now began working with a personal trainer to regain her strength, so she can return to dancing and modelling

Recalling her ordeal in December 2017, Miss Freegard said: 'The whole experience was terrifying. I was told I had developed sepsis and my kidneys were failing.

'Doctors warned me that I was just hours away from dying if I didn’t consent to an emergency operation to save my life.'

Miss Freegard added: 'For seven years my condition went undiagnosed.' Crohn's can weaken the immune system and make a sufferer more susceptible to infection.

Miss Freegard has now began working with a personal trainer to regain her strength, so she can return to dancing and modelling. 

Miss Freegard suffered from agonising stomach pain since she was 17, revealing how sometimes it caused her to vomit. 

She said: 'The pain became so intense that it often caused me to vomit. I felt so weak and fragile.' 

'I made countless visits to the doctors where I was initially told I may have severe IBS and was advised to keep a food diary. 

'I tried changing my diet, but the pain only got worse. It wasn’t long before I couldn’t keep any food down at all.' 

When she was 22, Miss Freegard began training at Wilkes Academy, a professional dance school for performing arts.

When Miss Freegard's weight began to plummet at an alarming rate, her mother rushed her to A&E (it is unclear if she was pictured before or after her ordeal)

When Miss Freegard's weight began to plummet at an alarming rate, her mother rushed her to A&E (it is unclear if she was pictured before or after her ordeal)

Despite her passion and desperation to succeed as a dancer, her severe stomach pains and constant bouts of sickness became a huge obstacle (pictured in hospital in December 2017)

Despite her passion and desperation to succeed as a dancer, her severe stomach pains and constant bouts of sickness became a huge obstacle (pictured in hospital in December 2017)

It was only when her cousin, who suffers from Crohn’s herself, recognised a similarity in their symptoms and urged her to undergo an endoscopy

It was only when her cousin, who suffers from Crohn’s herself, recognised a similarity in their symptoms and urged her to undergo an endoscopy

But despite her passion and desperation to succeed as a dancer, her severe stomach pains and constant bouts of sickness became a huge obstacle.

She added: 'I often had to leave my dance classes early or take sick days as the pain was so unbearable, I couldn’t even stand up.

'As I hadn’t yet been given a proper diagnosis, dance teachers and other students thought I was just being lazy or unreliable.

'It put a huge strain on my career and eventually, I got too poorly to continue my training.'

When Miss Freegard's weight began to plummet at an alarming rate, her mother rushed her to A&E.

There, doctors revealed she weighed just 5st (31.7kg) and immediately misdiagnosed her condition as anorexia.

Miss Freegard said: 'Doctors kept asking me: "Do you like food?" and it made me feel so frustrated. 

'I knew I wasn’t anorexic and there was more to it. I felt hopeless as doctors weren’t taking me seriously.'

It was only when her cousin, who suffers from Crohn’s herself, recognised a similarity in their symptoms and urged her to undergo an endoscopy.

Miss Freegard said: 'Eventually, I became too weak and had to give up dancing' (pictured recently, with the scars of her operation)

Miss Freegard said: 'Eventually, I became too weak and had to give up dancing' (pictured recently, with the scars of her operation)

Miss Freegard suffered her bout of blindness in December 2017. On one morning, her mother noticed she was looking pale (it is unclear who she is pictured with in hospital)

Miss Freegard suffered her bout of

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