DEAF since birth and having never heard a sound, the moment a woman hears for the first time and has her life transformed has been captured on film.

Joanne Milne, 40, from Gateshead, was born deaf, and during her 20s also began to lose her vision due to the rare medical condition Usher Syndrome.

But last month she was fitted with cochlear implants and after 40 years of silence the life-changing procedure has meant she is now able to hear.

The incredible moment when she hears a nurse going through the days of the week was filmed by her mother and shows her bursting into tears in shock.

The switch-on was the most emotional and overwhelming experience of my life and Im still in shock now. The first day everybody sounded robotic and I have to learn to recognise what these sounds are as I build a sound library in my brain, she said.

Hearing things for the first time is so, so emotional."

Ms Milne, who works for charity Sense, said she was now a lot more aware of things around her, which was a huge help given that she is also blind.

Im also attempting to use the telephone at one point but its one step at a time as its all so daunting," she said.

She thanked the team at the Midlands Implant Centre at the Queen Elizabeth Hospital, Birmingham, for the procedure.

As a result of the transformation her friend Tremayne Crossley decided to make her a compilation of songs selecting one from each year of her life.

He then sent the compilation to radio presenter Lauren Laverne for her programme on the station BBC Radio 6 Music.