A mum has no memories of her daughter's birth which almost claimed both of their lives.
Terri Morgan was taken to Hull Royal Infirmary at 32 weeks pregnant after she began to suffer heavy bleeding and started drifting in and out of conciousness.
The 26-year-old was whisked into surgery where she delivered baby Romanie-Mae, weighing just 4lb 11oz, Hull Daily Mail reported .
Terri, from Hull, was able to meet her tiny premature baby for the briefest of moments before the newborn was taken to the neonatal ward.
The mum was rushed into intensive care because she had liver failure, which almost killed her.
"I'd spent four days in hospital before my unexpected birth as I was suffering with swelling and pre-eclampsia but I was given tablets to lower my blood pressure and was sent home," said Terri.

"But then I started to have real bad pains that felt like contractions and I rang the labour ward but they said it wouldn't be labour and advised me to go to the toilet, but when I went and sat on it I bled all over and stained the toilet bowl.
"I was on my own with my little girl downstairs and managed to make it to bed to lie down, where I was drifting in and out of consciousness and then just completely passed out."
Terri was in so much pain and under the influence of so much anesthetic that she has been left with no memories of the birth.
"I came to in hospital and was in a lot of pain with gas and air and needles sticking out of me everywhere and then I got rushed to theatre and after that I don't remember anything," she said.

"Then after that I nearly died as I had liver failure and almost got rushed to Leeds for a transplant and was put on the intensive care unit."
Husband Adam also found the ordeal a great emotional strain and was torn between looking out for his newborn, caring for his then three-year-old Rosa-Leigh and checking in on his wife.
"I felt so bad that I didn't remember my own daughter's birth. It was real scary when I was bleeding heavily at home as I thought that I was going to lose my baby," Terri continued.

"When I woke up after going into theatre and having Romanie-Mae, I knew I was in hospital but panic hit me as I didn't know where my baby was and I was laying there thinking that something had happened to her.
"I eventually did get to meet her, but then I was becoming that unwell that she had to be taken away as I wasn't really with it and got rushed to intensive care with liver failure.
"It was a massive shock to be taken away from my baby and I was that ill that I don't really remember what was going on, but I got told that I nearly died.

"It was really difficult for my husband Adam as well as he was so worried for me, but also wanted to check in on our new baby as well as looking after our other little girl, and he cried because everything got to him.
"The staff were fantastic though and always there for us, even after Romanie-Mae was discharged at 35 weeks, with nurses coming to the house to check on her every other day, which was such a relief."
Romanie-Mae is now "still a little behind" according to her mum but is a thriving, happy little girl.
Tragically Terri's grandma died of cancer two weeks after Romanie-Mae was born and never got chance to meet her great-granddaughter.