A DEVASTATED mum has told how her daughter died just weeks away from a potentially life saving transplant.
Aimee Read, 29, was due to undergo a bone marrow transplant for a rare blood disease which attacks the body’s immune system.
But Aimee, from Ramsbottom, Greater Manchester, fell ill and died suddenly on May 28 after contracting double pneumonia.
Speaking after the shocking death of her “amazing” daughter, mum Wendy said Aimee’s passing “doesn’t feel real”.
In a touching tribute, she added: “This is a parent’s worst nightmare. We have fought so hard for her to be here and now she is not.
“She has always been an amazing listener and so loving and caring. She was just a joy to be around. Everyone loved her.

“It’s just heart-breaking that she isn’t here anymore.”
In 2016, Aimee was diagnosed with an extremely rare condition called paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria (PNH) which affects only one in every five million people.
It means she was one in 12 in the UK with the condition.
She had a bone marrow transplant back in January but it proved unsuccessful, leaving her and her family “deflated”.
But in May, doctors offered the 29-year-old a glimmer of hope when they told her they had found another donor and a transplant was offered in July.
Tragically, Aimee never had the chance to receive the transplant and she died in St James’s Hospital in Leeds.
The former nursery nurse had fought for years against various life threatening illnesses, Manchester Evening News reports.
At just two-years-old she was diagnosed with leukemia and underwent two years of chemotherapy before recovering.
But the cancer returned six-months later and mum Wendy launched a massive awareness campaign to get Brits on the bone marrow register – the transplant she needed to save her life.
Shortly before Christmas 1997 a match was found and she battled on and even had a visit from David and Victoria Bekcham.
Aimee eventually returned to school aged 10 and was given the all-clear from cancer.
Even when she was going through her worst times, she was thinking about others
Wendy, Aimee’s mum
But at age 13 she was diagnosed with myelitis, a neurological condition which saw her brain and spinal chord swell causing paralysis.
Amazingly, she defied doctors and was walking three months later.
However, tragedy struck again when aged 21 and pregnant, she and former partner Kyle lost their baby Hope at 22 weeks due to complications.
Two years later she lost another child, Charlie, when their heart was not beating – Aimee went on to give birth to the stillborn child.
Only months after Charlie was stillborn – Amy was diagnosed with PNH and in 2017 had a brain tumour removed which doctors had spotted on a routine MRI scan.
“Even when she was going through her worst times, she was thinking about others”, mum Wendy said.


“Aimee had to endure so many things that most girls her age don’t have to go through.”
A fundraiser has been set up in Aimee’s memory, click here to find out more.
Source: The Sun