"Doctors said I had 80% chance of dying after symptoms revealed ectopic pregnancy"

  • 21 days ago
A woman has told how doctors warned there was an 80 per cent chance she would die after surprising symptoms revealed she had an ectopic pregnancy.

Just a few weeks after finding out she was pregnant, Natalie Stapley Cutting, 26, knew "something was definitely wrong."

At seven weeks pregnant, she noticed a persistent tingling in her right thigh, coupled with some numbness and a stabbing pain in her right side.

Though her 12-week scan was on the horizon, Natalie saw her GP early to discuss her concerns.

She claims she was given a clean bill of health - but unsatisfied, spent £90 on a private scan, which found an ectopic pregnancy.

She had life-saving surgery to remove the fertilised egg, the right fallopian tube and part of her uterus lining.

And now the military make-up artist is speaking out to urge women to trust their own bodies and always get a second opinion if they are in doubt.

Natalie, from Newark, Nottinghamshire, said: “I almost lost my life due to a misdiagnosis from my doctor.

“Private healthcare saved my life."

Natalie and her husband, Tom Cutting, 27, who works as a mechanical technician, found out they were pregnant on December 6 2023.

She was initially assured by her GP that her pregnancy was normal, but nevertheless remained convinced that something was untoward.

She said: “The GP was convinced I was fine, but it just didn’t seem right to me.

“The doctors didn’t listen to me properly.

“If I had listened to my GP I don’t know where I’d be today.”

She had a private scan on 16 December.

She said: “They found my uterus was empty.

“As a private clinic, they couldn’t offer a diagnosis but recommended we go to King’s Mill Hospital immediately.”

Natalie underwent her first exploratory surgery on December 18, which detected the fertilised egg in her right fallopian tube - growing into her uterus lining.

An ectopic pregnancy occurs when a fertilised egg implants itself outside of the womb, usually in one of the fallopian tubes - which connect the ovaries to the womb.

If the fertilised egg is found here it is unfortunately not possible to save the pregnancy and the growing tissue poses a danger to life if left untreated.

Natalie had surgery on December 19.

She had to sign a waiver concerning the risk of death.

Natalie, who specialises as an army make-up artist preparing ‘casualties’ for training purposes, recovered from the surgery and now wishes to share her story to help others.

If Natalie had waited until the 12-week scan as her GP advised, then she would have likely died from internal bleeding, she says.

Natalie has set up a podcast called Ectopic Pregnancy and Me on TikTok.

She said: “I have set this up to create awareness to in turn help save lives and to create a community to support those suffering from an ectopic pregnancy and the mental health effects afterwards.”

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