A CORONER today commended the colleagues of a Huddersfield soldier for risking their lives to help her after she was injured in an explosion as she tried to detonate a bomb in Afghanistan.

Captain Lisa Jade Head, of 11 Explosive Ordnance Disposal Regiment, the Royal Logistic Corps, lost her limbs in the blast in an alleyway in Helmand Province on April 18 2011.

The 29-year-old, from Almondbury, was flown home and treated in hospital in Birmingham, where she died the next day.

Today, at Bradford Coroner's Court, Coroner Paul Marks told the inquest into Capt Head's death that it was "testament to her own physical stamina" and the quality of care she had received that she survived for as long as she did with the "catastrophic injuries".

He also praised colleagues who went to her aid after the explosion.

Professor Marks told Corporal Adam Tucker: "At potential risk to your own lives, you went to the help of one of your fallen comrades and did your absolute best."

He added: "I commend you on that."

Cpl Tucker told the inquest that he and Capt Head had gone to the alleyway in Nahr-e-Saraj after reports of a suspicious device being found there.

He said Capt Head defused one Improvised Explosive Device (IED) before retreating to a safe distance.

She returned into the alleyway with a colleague to take photographs when a second device partially exploded, resulting in no injuries.

Cpl Tucker said: "I asked Captain Head over and over again if she was happy to continue and being a stubborn Yorkshire woman as she was, she was quite happy to continue."

The soldier said Capt Head returned into the alleyway again and a third device detonated.

Cpl Tucker said he grabbed a weapon, medical kit and metal detector to search down to Capt Head but, when the dust cleared, he realised there was no time to search safely.

"We took the risk and ran down to Captain Head," he said. "On arrival to Captain Head, we realised she was a quadruple amputee and time was limited."

He described how he and a colleague applied at least nine tourniquets and field dressings to her wounds before she was airlifted to hospital at Camp Bastion.

"She was conscious the whole time. Not aware but conscious," he said. "Her eyes were open and she was responsive."

The inquest was told that Capt Head lost both legs, one arm above the elbow and digits on her other hand in the blast.

The cause of death was given as blast injuries caused by an explosion, including head injury.

Prof Marks offered his sympathies to Capt Head's family, who were not present at today's inquest.

Colonel Gareth Collett, an Army bomb disposal expert, praised the professionalism of Capt Head, who was only the second female British soldier to be killed in Afghanistan.

"Why did she decide to go back? The simple answer is that she is a professional soldier," he said.

"If the alleyway had not been cleared properly local nationals would have been killed in that area."

Col Collett commended the actions of the soldiers who rushed to Capt Head's aid, allowing her to make it back to Britain so her family could see her before she died.

He said: "Obviously the actions of Cpl Tucker and the rest of the team are highly commendable - to give her first aid and to get her back to the UK.

"I want to say thank you to them for letting the family see their daughter before she was pronounced dead at hospital in Birmingham.

"There was nothing else you could have done so I just want to take my hat off to you."

The inquest heard that soldiers had been using the alleyway where Capt Head stepped on the IED all day. But the "complex" way in which the Taliban lay their devices make them difficult to detect.

Col Collett said the first high-metal content IED was placed as a "come on" for coalition soldiers, who would have found it with handheld metal detectors.

But the enemy then laid two low metal content devices nearby to hit troops dealing with the first device. It was the third of these that fatally injured Capt Head.

Col Collett said: "The insurgents are very, very resourceful. They are very capable - they make very, very simple IEDs but lay them in a complex fashion."

Prof Marks recorded a verdict that Capt Head was unlawfully killed on active service in Afghanistan.

The coroner praised the officer for her courage.

He said: "I cannot praise too highly the courage of Lisa Head and her colleagues. The reason for this is because they are all volunteers deployed in a theatre of war far from home and family for our continuing benefit and security."