Hollyoaks’ Lucy-Jo Hudson in scary hospital dash with son after he stopped breathing

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Hollyoaks star Lucy Jo Hudson, 40, has opened up about her son being rushed to hospital after suffering a serious allergic reaction.
The star, who plays Donna-Marie Quinn on the soap, revealed that she feared for her three-year-old son Carter's life after the terrifying health scare.
The toddler was taken to Ormskirk Hospital in Lancashire after going into anaphylactic shock from eating a snack containing traces of nuts.
Telling her fans about the terrifying ordeal, the actress wrote on social media: "Carter was 18 months. He was in the trolley, eating snacks while I was getting tea with Sienna, and he suddenly looked at me, and I knew something was severely wrong."
"He went grey, his mouth went blue, and he started to go all limp. He was struggling to catch his breath. God, did my heart sink.
"I literally grabbed him out of the trolley, abandoned the shopping, and Sienna and I just ran to my car.
"I strapped him in his car seat (which was awful because at this point he was going in and out of consciousness, and his skin was going all mottled, and I couldn't hold him close as I had to drive to A&E."
The mum-of-two admitted that she feared her son might not make it, adding: "It was 10 minutes, but it felt like a lifetime. My poor Sienna was crying in the back asking me if he was going to die.
"I kept trying to reassure her he was fine, but I couldn't stop the tears. I honestly thought we were losing him," she said.
"I kept talking to him, telling him to stay with us, and he was trying, god love him! I remember pulling up outside A&E, and I just ran into the hospital cradling Carter with Sienna by my side and screaming 'he's not breathing.'"
Lucy Jo shares Carter with her partner Lewis Devine, and has daughter Sienna, from her previous relationship with her ex-husband Coronation Street star, Alan Halsall, 40.
She thanked the hospital for their quick response to her son's allergic reaction, saying: "The nurses flew out of every door and took my baby out of my arms and took him straight into a private room… After that, it all felt like a blur…
"Nurse after nurse came in, doctors round him, oxygen mask on, adrenaline in his leg, honestly the room was full of nurses trying to bring him round! It was the most terrifying moment of my life."
Lucy Jo said her son's allergy means that she has to carry an Epi-pen device with them everywhere they go and has to warn restaurants in advance to ensure the food doesn't contain nuts.
She ended the post saying: "Thank you to the amazing staff at Ormskirk Hospital for saving our boy's life. We will be forever grateful."
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