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Edinburgh Live
Edinburgh Live
National
Steven Rae & Sian Traynor

Devastated West Lothian mum finds daughter dead two weeks before Christmas

A West Lothian mum has shared her heartbreak after finding her daughter dead in the bathroom just two weeks before Christmas.

Sharon Brown and her family have been left devastated after her 30-year-old daughter, Aleisha Evans, passed away through the night on December 11.

Suffering from both Epilepsy and Fowler’s syndrome - a debilitating condition that affects the urinary tract system, Sharon shared how she had discovered Aleisha on the bathroom floor 'turning blue.'

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Attending a concert together the evening of her death, Aleisha had been in good spirits before she tragically passed away at their Livingston home.

Speaking to the Daily Record, Sharon, 54, said: “I went through to the bathroom and found her dead.

"I gave her a shake but she was blue in the face. I tried to resuscitate her while my other daughter was phoning an ambulance.

"The paramedics really tried to revive her, but she was gone."

"I took her to a concert in Glasgow the night before. She was in a wheelchair as she had really bad mobility problems and she slept through some of the concert, but when we got back to the hotel she was in good fettle and had a couple of vodkas.

Aleisha had studied to become a nurse (Daily Record)

"We are just totally numb at the moment. It doesn’t seem real."

Still without answers as to the cause of Aleisha's death, the family is currently waiting on the results of a post-mortem examination.

The bright West Lothian woman had previously been training to be a nurse, but her poor health forced her to give up on her dream just months before she was set to graduate.

Aleisha lived with chronic pain as a result of her Fowler’s syndrome and Sharon moved in two years ago to become her full-time carer .

Sharon added: "Aleisha was in constant pain. She was on morphine and dihydrocodeine, the strongest drugs she could be given.

"She would often be in agony for hours at a time and she just wanted all her problems sorted to be brought under control so she could get on with her life.

"She always said, ‘Mum I’m so happy with every aspect of my life apart from the pain’.

"Aleisha was so caring and strong. All she cared about was everyone else. She was there for everybody despite her struggles. She was a beautiful person in every way."

Aleisha is survived by her mum Sharon, older brother Andrew and younger sister Katie. She was also a loving auntie to a nephew and two nieces.

Aleisha's sister-in-law Lisa also remembered her as an 'inspiration'.

She said: “Aleisha had so many hopes and dreams.

"She wanted to be a paramedic and she was so desperate to be a mum. The conditions she had weren't life limiting but I could see that her pain was getting worse and worse.

“But Aleisha would do her best to grin and bear it. She was an absolute inspiration and to not have her here anymore is horrific."

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