A MARRIED At First Sight groom sparked concern among fans after revealing his son had been rushed to hospital.
The parent of one, who appeared in last year’s E4 series, captured youngster Leo with a bandaged head after he received treatment in the medical ward.
Ryan Livesey, who entered the Married At First Sight experiment as an intruder groom, showcased his brave seven-year-old offspring sitting patiently in the Paedeatric Emergency Department.
He had a white bandage taped on the back of his skull with a bloodied wound visible underneath.
Yet despite the drama, the youngster looked content to be playing a game on his hand held console.
The TV star wrote on his Instagram caption: “A&E on a Friday night.
“Leo’s split his head open playing football.”
In the next slide posted to his Instagram Stories, Ryan revealed the wound in full glory.
There were no further updates, suggesting the schoolboy is home and well.
It is his second hospital trip in a matter of months, after he was rushed to hospital in December.
He has previously described Leo as “my world, my purpose, my everything.”
RYAN’S HEALTH ISSUES
Ryan was 22 when he learned he was going to be a dad, back in 2017, when he learned he was going to be a dad.
But his world was turned upside down three months later when he was diagnosed with bladder cancer.
He fought the disease, only for it to return 18 months later.
“Facing all of this at such a young age was the hardest thing I鈥檝e ever been through,” Ryan has said.
He previously opened up to The Sun about how he discovered he had the terrifying disease after wetting the bed.
I started wetting the bed, it was really embarrassing but I put it down to having too much to drink and of course, I didn’t tell anyone and hid it,鈥 Ryan said.
鈥淚鈥檇 go to the toilet and not feel like I was emptying my bladder properly.
鈥淚鈥檇 have to go again 20 minutes later because I couldn鈥檛 hold it in.
He then noticed blood in his urine after a night out a few months later.
Ryan was diagnosed with stage two bladder cancer, making one of the 10,500 people in the UK each year – and 29 per day – to receive this life-changing news.
鈥淚 was in complete shock,鈥 Ryan admitted.
Luckily, after two battles with the disease, Ryan is now in remission.