Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
Wales Online
Wales Online
Annette Belcher & Nicole Wootton-Cane

Mum's serious heart condition 'put down to panic attacks and anxiety'

A mum who has been diagnosed with a serious heart condition said she felt 'fit and well' before she suddenly collapsed on her kitchen floor. Sophie Elliott was a 19-year-old law student at the time when she said she experienced 'the worst chest pain ever.

Doctors diagnosed her with Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome. This is where there is an extra electrical connection in the heart and causes the heart to beat abnormally fast.

The mum-of-two said her life became 'dominated' by her heart condition for a considerable time. But, despite her setbacks Sophie bravely plans to run the London marathon after years of 'strict' restrictions on her lifestyle, the MEN reports.

She said: “I had three years of being quite strict and losing out on a lot of what I felt as a 21-year-old I should be doing because I had to be so careful as they weren’t sure how bad things could get," she said.

Sophie said she had experienced chest pains as she was growing up and knew there was something not right. But this had been put down to panic attacks or anxiety.

After a few years Sophie had an ablation, which is a procedure that corrects abnormal heart rhythms by blocking electrical pathways in the heart, to treat the condition. Along with medication, the treatment meant Sophie and Mark felt ready to have children.

She sadly suffered two miscarriages before becoming pregnant with her first child, Grace. Doctors have not been able to tell her whether her miscarriages were related to her heart condition or not.

Subscribe here for the latest news where you live

“When I got pregnant with Grace things took a really bad turn because my heart rate wouldn’t stay stable and one day unfortunately I fell on my bump,” Sophie said. “Grace was suffering from the stress of it, so they ended up delivering my daughter early.”

Six months after the birth of her son and with the support of her cardiologist, she completed the Chester Marathon in five hours. Now Sophie is preparing to run the London Marathon - and hopes she can improve on her time.

“I’ve done more training this time and I am a lot fitter because I am not six months post-baby like I was last time so I am hoping I will go quicker," she said. "Anything under 4 hours 30 would be really good – just a real achievement for me.”

Sophie, who lives in Derbyshire, will be putting her running on hold later this year when she goes in for another ablation procedure. But she is determined to enjoy the day and raise money for British Heart Foundation before the procedure.

“They’ve given us really good support and there’s been a few times when we have reached out for reassurance, so I just want to be able to give something back,” she said.

Karen McDonnell, Senior Events Manager at the British Heart Foundation, said Sophie was a real inspiration. “She’s taking on this marathon challenge despite living with a heart condition herself – that's an incredible achievement and she should be very proud of herself,” she said.

“The money she raises will go towards funding lifesaving research to help people like herself who have heart or circulatory problems but who still want to lead full lives. Thank you Sophie – and good luck on the day. I am sure you’re going to smash it!”

You can support Sophie on her Just Giving page here.

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.