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MUM'S AGONY

My daughter, 27, was told she had IBS – she died weeks before her little girl’s 2nd birthday

A MUM has revealed that her daughter has died of ovarian cancer at the age of 27 - after doctors dismissed her symptoms as IBS.

Estelle Wignall was striving to reach her daughter Brooke's second birthday in May.

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Estelle Wignall was determined to reach her daugher Brooke's second birthday in May. She said the future "looked fantastic" when she and her husband Mike (pictured), married in 2019
Estelle's mum revealed she has died of ovarian cancer. She is pictured with her daughter, Brooke, during treatment

Estelle, a former administrator from Wigan, started experiencing tiredness and bloating five years ago.

Doctors at first insisted she had irritable bowel syndrom (IBS),which may cause bloating as well as stomach pains, diarrhoea, constipation and other tummy problems.

But it was later discovered she in fact had stage four ovarian cancer, the main symptom of which is bloating.

On Wednesday morning, an announcement was made by Estelle's mum on the Facebook page called

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It said: "It's with a heavy heart to let you all know that my beautiful daughter Estelle Wignall has passed away at 2.40am. 

“She is now at peace.

"Thank you all for the support you have shown her over the last 12 months. 

“She fought till the end like the little warrior she was. Rest in peace beautiful."

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It came not long after Estelle had written an update on a page, which was set up to try and raise cash for treatment abroad.

She said: “I am now relying on a wheelchair due to severe abdominal pain when I try and walk. 

“I fear if I don’t get help now I won’t make it to 28 and my daughter's second birthday.”

Estelle had a gut instinct from the beginning that her symptoms were more than just IBS.

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Speaking in January, the mum-of-one said: “I picked up a leaflet in hospital about ovarian cancer and I immediately diagnosed myself. 

“But everyone told me not to be so stupid because I was only 22 years old.”

The risk of ovarian cancer sharply increases from around the age of 40, and is diagnosed in almost 7,500 women every year in the UK.

It takes the lives of some 4,200 women every year, with 35 per cent of patients living for at least 10 years past diagnosis. 

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