Former Coronation Street star Shobna Gulati reveals her mum has died after heartbreaking battle with dementia – The Sun

FORMER Coronation Street star Shobna Gulati has revealed her mum, Asha,  has died after a heartbreaking battle with dementia.

The 53-year-old took to Instragam to pay tribute to the “linchpin” of her family, telling fans she was “completely heartbroken.”

Sharing a picture of her mum, she wrote: “Our beautiful mum passed away , a few weeks ago, peacefully in her sleep . Still processing, these days are hard .

“She was our linchpin connecting us as a family . Our lives are changed and life is very different now.

“She did her very best and in the last 25 years I grew to know her as a person and the amazing woman that was our mum and for that circumstance and time I am truly grateful.”

The actress added: “She taught me such a lot … but not how to live without her. Completely heartbroken.”


She was inundated with messages of support from friends and fans, with one writing:  “So sorry to hear this darling.”

Another added: “Sending love and light, peace and blessings”, while someone else wrote: “I’m so sorry to hear this Shobs!”

Shobna, who played Sunita Alahan in Corrie, previously revealed  her mum was living with vascular dementia.

In a blog for Alzheimer’s Research UK, she described how difficult life had become, writing: “We’ve always been close. Living around the corner to Mum meant she’s always been a major influence in my life.

What is vascular dementia and what causes it?

Vascular dementia is the second most common type of dementia in the UK after Alzheimer's disease, where the brain is damaged due to a lack of blood flow.

If the vascular system within the brain becomes damaged – so that the blood vessels leak or become blocked – then blood cannot reach the brain cells and they will eventually die.

This death of brain cells can cause problems with memory, thinking or reasoning, and when these cognitive problems are bad enough to impact on daily life, it is known as vascular dementia.

There are several different types of vascular dementia, due to the varying levels of damage on the affected part of the brain.

They include stroke-related dementia, single-infarct and multi-infarct dementia, subcortical vascular dementia and mixed dementia – which includes both vascular and Alzheimer's disease.

“It’s not so easy for Mum to keep up any more these days, and she prefers to stay at home.

She continued: “Every day, every hour, every second can be different. Some days we laugh and laugh together, some days Mum just can’t find comfort in anything.

“There is so much stigma about dementia, particularly in South Asian communities. This weighs strongly on mum and, to this day, she’s struggled to accept her diagnosis.”

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