Loose Women’s Judi Love sH๏τ daggers at Myleene Klᴀss during Thursday’s episode when a debate about weight loss turned heated.
The panel were discussing the use of injections for obesity and if it would ever be ok to ask someone if they had used them.
Myleene, 47, reflected on the time that she had been questioned about her body while pregnant as Judi, 44, discussed being medically overweight.
The conversation resulted in a huge clash between the pair as the duo spoke over one another and left fans of the programme in shock.
Viewers said that Judi ‘couldn’t look more unimpressed with Myleene’ during the discussion.
The singer said: ‘We were reduced back down to what we looked like in the band when I thought we would be judged on our singing.’
Loose Women ’s Judi Love sH๏τ daggers at Myleene Klᴀss during Thursday’s episode when a debate about weight loss turned heated
The panel were discussing the use of injections for obesity and if it would ever be ok to ask someone if they had used them
She continued: ‘All the other bands were commenting, stylists would cut out the labels on clothes. Behind the scenes I was pregnant.’
Judi questioned: ‘But have you ever been classed as medically overweight?’
Struggling to answer the question Myleene responded: ‘I could have helped myself from a health perspective…’
Sharing their thoughts to X, fans of the show commented: ‘Judi’s face tells a better story than Myleene’s mouth’; ‘Myleene is extremely aggressive and loves to make everything about her, Judy quite rightly looked ready to deck her’; ‘Judi just slap her and shut her up’;
‘Myleene needs to calm down, watch her right eye twitching like mad when she gets worked up. Stress is a killer’; ‘Thank god Myleene’s finished for 5 minutes. She always turns everything into a rant’;
‘Like all of us who have battled with their weight. Judi Love is having none of this skinny/fat chat by Myleene’; ‘Judi couldn’t look more un-interested or unimpressed with Myleene if she tried… However I do get what she’s saying.. and probably feeling in her head.’
Last week, Judi revealed it took her seven years to get her Endometriosis diagnosis and detailed how the pain was so bad it left her ‘bed bound’ and on one occasion rushing to hospital.
During Friday’s instalment of the ITV daytime programme, she joined the panel to discuss how Endometriosis affects between 1 in 10 and 1 in 7 women and that it takes sufferers nearly nine years on average to get a diagnosis.
Sharing their thoughts to X, fans of the show commented: ‘Judi’s face tells a better story than Myleene’s mouth’
Opening up on her own experience, Judi confessed that it took her roughly seven years to be diagnosed with the chronic disease.
Claiming that the pain was unbearable, Judi said: ‘It took me about seven years to be diagnosed from about 17 up until about 25 even.’
‘I mean, even thinking about it, the pain that comes back to my mind, because you’re getting to that stage, you’re having periods, your bodies changing, you’re not really sure, and then I just remembered I had really heavy periods and really bad pains.’
She continued: ‘And I mean pains to the point where I’d be in bed for a couple of days, I didn’t want to eat, I’d be vomiting, and then it got to a stage where it was affecting work.’
‘It (also) got to a stage where I ended up in A&E because it was so bad, it was so heavy, you know they do the normal protocol, “could you be pregnant?” you know all these other tests that you should be doing because you have an infection and all these things.
‘And they would just be like “oh it’s just a bad period, take some paracetamol and hopefully that will help”.’
The comedian also detailed her struggle with getting pregnant and revealed she had to go back to her doctors several times after mentioning she suffered from ‘really bad periods’.
Last week, Judi revealed it took her seven years to get her Endometriosis diagnosis and detailed how the pain was so bad it left her ‘bed bound’ and on one occasion rushing to hospital
During Friday’s instalment of the daytime programme, the comedian, 44, joined the panel to discuss how Endometriosis affects between 1 in 10 and 1 in 7 women
She said: ‘I was with a partner, a long-term partner at that time, and I was thinking about having children, and I just wasn’t getting pregnant.
‘So I decided to speak to my doctors and mentioned about (my) really bad periods and I had to go back several times.
‘For women, especially women of colour, women as well anyway, our periods and pain is not really taken as much.’
Read More Judi Love shoots daggers at Coleen Nolan as she’s called out for ‘rude’ habit live on Loose Women – and even the studio audience applaud
‘So I think that had an impact. And finally, after months and months of going back, I got referred to a gynaecologist and then I had a laparoscopy, where they go inside your stomach and have a look, and then they found that I had Endometriosis.’
She revealed: ‘I never really knew what it was, but it really impacted me emotionally.’
Endometriosis is a chronic condition where tissue similar to the lining of the uterus grows outside of the uterus.
It’s a common condition that affects around 1 in 10 women and adolescents of reproductive age.
Symptoms of Endometriosis can include pelvic pain, painful periods, pain during or after Sєxual intercourse, heavy periods, infertility, and fatigue or low energy.
The chronic condition can affect the ovaries, fallopian tubes, tissues that hold the uterus in place, the outer surface of the uterus, the lining of the pelvic cavity, and the space between the uterus and the rectum or bladder.
Endometriosis is not an infection, contagious, or cancer. With the right treatment, many of the issues it causes can be addressed.
Endometriosis can start at a person’s first menstrual period and last until menopause.
Healthcare professionals sometimes advise those with endometriosis not to delay having children because the condition may become worse with time.
You can call the Endometriosis UK helpline for free, confidential support at 0808 808 2227.