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Lincolnshire mum wakes up with a broken back and a broken neck after sleepwalking

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Lincolnshire mum wakes up with a broken back and a broken neck after sleepwalking This is Lincolnshire -- Lincolnshire mum, Morag Fisher, woke up in a pool of blood- having broken her back, neck and both wrists after falling down the stairs whilst sleepwalking. Morag Fisher, from Witham St Hugh's, was found with life-threatening injuries in the early hours of the morning whilst staying at a friend's house in Long Eaton. The mother-of-one also broke her jaw, nose, eye socket and cheek bones. Miss Fisher said she had sleepwalked "all her life" and bouts were unpredictable but usually happened when she was stressed. The 40-year-old customer services assistant – who has installed baby gates on her stairs at home to stop it happening again – is still recovering but hopes to return to work within the next two months. She said: "When they found me I was bleeding a lot and my friend who used to be a nurse thought I was dead. "The ambulance got to me and took me to the Major Trauma Unit and later that afternoon the doctors said that they did not know how I wasn't in intensive care. "It was a week before I looked at myself in the mirror because my face was such a mess, I just couldn't bring myself to it. "Now, when I do look at myself I feel lucky to be alive and even luckier to be walking. "I have sleepwalked before but usually I get up and have a wander around and then go back to bed but because I was at a friend's house it was unfamiliar and I fell." Despite her horrific injuries she only spent 10 days in the Queen's Medical Centre's Major Trauma Unit and was discharged on December 3. She is now recovering at her Witham-St-Hugh's home with help from her six-year-old daughter Olivia Conley. She said: "My daughter has been a superstar throughout all of this and if anything she is mothering me. "I am still wearing a brace for my back and she helps me with it. "She even said that I look like a mummy again and not a zombie. "I have now put stairgates in so this never happens again." Miss Fisher praised staff at the QMC for her care. "You hear so many bad things about the NHS but the care that I received is second to none," she said. Friend Carl Muggleton was in bed when he heard the crash at roughly 5am. The 39-year-old, of Landsdown Grove, Long Eaton, said: "I woke up to an almighty crash and jumped out of bed and saw her lying at the bottom of the stairs in a pool of blood. "She was in a very bad way. "I knew that she did sleep walk but never expected anything like this. "I tried to stem the bleeding until the ambulance arrived and it wasn't until it came that I noticed one of her wrists had spun all the way around. "It was apparent straight away that she was very poorly. "I have a very sharp set of stairs and there is not a lot of room at the bottom so she is lucky to be with us today. "The treatment she had at the hospital was second to none and it makes you realise what a special place we have in Nottingham." Major trauma case manager Rohan Revell from the Queen's Medical Centre said: "We can only assume that she went head-over-heals instead of down on her bum and a lot of fatalities happen in this way. "When she came in she looked like she had gone 10 rounds with someone. "We gave her an epidural to address her pain and the spinal injury she had. "She still has to wear a back brace like a corset to protect the spine while it heals. "She was an absolutely lovely patient and the most rewarding thing for us is that she has been back to visit us all." Miss Fisher is expecting to have her back brace removed in roughly six weeks. Reported by This is 11 hours ago.

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