Award Banner
Award Banner
Entertainment

Bindi Irwin given 'second chance at life' after endometriosis surgery

Bindi Irwin given 'second chance at life' after endometriosis surgery

Bindi Irwin given 'second chance at life' after endometriosis surgery
PHOTO: Instagram/Bindi Irwin

Bindi Irwin has been given a "second chance at life" after undergoing surgery for endometriosis.

The 25-year-old conservationist — who has a two-year-old daughter Grace with husband Chandler Powell — had suffered from the reproductive condition, which sees uterine tissue grow outside the uterus, for more than a decade.

After undergoing life-changing surgery, she can "see the world in a new way" as she balances motherhood and filming TV shows at her family's zoo.

She told Fox News Digital: "My life now looks completely different than it did before I had my surgery. Over the 10 years that I was really battling with endometriosis without knowing it, I would get progressively worse every week and in the end, before my surgery, I was barely able to get out of bed. And now on the other side of surgery, I mean, I'm going for daily zoo walks with my family.

"I'm able to go to our management meetings and check up on our animals and do the filming work that I love and play with my daughter. And it is just so wonderful. I feel like I see the world in a new way now. I'm able to actually do things again. It does feel like a second chance at life."

Bindi — who is the daughter of late Crocodile Hunter Steve Irwin and his widow Terri — admitted in August she wasn't sure whether or not to discuss her health publicly, but she felt like she had a responsibility to try and help other women by sharing her story.

In a lengthy Instagram post, she wrote: "For 10 years I've struggled with insurmountable fatigue, pain and nausea. Trying to remain a positive person and hide the pain has been a very long road.

"These last 10 years have included many tests, doctors' visits, scans, etc. A doctor told me it was simply something you deal with as a woman and I gave up entirely, trying to function through the pain.

"I didn't find answers until a friend @lesliemosier helped set me on a path of regaining my life. I decided to undergo surgery for endometriosis.

"Every part of my life was getting torn apart because of the pain. To cut a long story short, they found 37 lesions, some very deep and difficult to remove, a chocolate cyst.

"@seckinmd's first words to me when I was in recovery were, 'How did you live with this much pain?' Validation for years of pain is indescribable."

ALSO READ: Oscar-winning Italian diva Sophia Loren in hospital after fall

Source: Bang

This website is best viewed using the latest versions of web browsers.