The Sunday Post (Inverness)

Meet the bravest beauty queen in Scotland

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But as she glides down the catwalk looking her very best for the judges, she’ll have an extra accessory – the feeding tube which helps keep her body nourished.

Despite her healthy glow and shining hair that make her look every inch a beauty queen, an unusual condition means that t Nicole hasn’t been able to eat a proper meal since March last year.

Instead she relies on a feeding tube which travels from her nose, down her throat and into her r stomach, to deliver the vitall nourishmen­t she needs.

So while other finalists in the Miss Galaxy Scotland pageant are worrying about their evening dresses, swimwear, hair and makeup, she’ll be hoping her nasogastri­c feeding tube stays in place.

Nicole, 22, of Musselburg­h, East Lothian, said: “The tube is part of who I am at the moment and I shouldn’t be ashamed of it. Half the time I forget it’s there, but I do get stares from people in the street.

“I’ve since spoken to lots of people who think the pageant is a great way to show that people who have illnesses and pain can still look good.”

Nicole suffers from functional or cyclic vomiting syndrome, which leaves sufferers battling nausea, vomiting, headaches and stomach cramps. There’s no known cure and it’s not clear exactly what causes it.

The condition leads to bouts of vomiting which can last weeks at a time.

At one point, Nicole’s weight dropped to six stone.

Nicole Gray, crowned Miss East Lothian Galaxy, relies on a feeding tube for nutrition.

“A f t e r t h re e we e k s of no nutrition, the doctors gave me a feeding tube,” she added.

The tube provides Nicole with calories and protein to keep her body going.

But while she craves all the foods she used to love – like pizza, which is the last thing she remembers sitting down to enjoy – nothing stays in her stomach.

Nicole entered the beauty pageant after deciding she needed a confidence booster.

She posted pictures to the organisers of the Miss Galaxy UK pageants and was stunned to be declared Miss East Lothian Galaxy for 2016/17.

She will take part in the Miss Galaxy Scotland finals, to be held in March next year.

Buoyed by her success, she’s now running her own online beauty pageant for women with chronic illness and disabiliti­es.

“I want people in the chronic illness community to know that they are beautiful too,” she added. FUNCTIONAL or cyclic vomiting syndrome (CVS) has no known cure and it’s not clear what causes it.

Suffers can vomit or retch up to 12 times an hour, with some episodes lasting weeks or months.

In severe cases, sufferers can become malnourish­ed. And fluid loss can lead to potentiall­y fatal electrolyt­e imbalances.

It’s thought cyclic vomiting syndrome may be linked to migraines.

In some cases, it is believed stress or anxiety could be an underlying cause. It is also thought to have genetic links.

Robin Dover, of the Cyclical Vomiting Syndrome Associatio­n, said: “CVS has been around since the 1800s but it’s clinically still not well understood or well known.

“Diagnosis can take years, and sometimes it’s mistaken as a psychologi­cal condition, which it’s not.”

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