Glamour model Katherine Nwaiwu flew into a furious rage which led to her assaulting her husband and the manager of the hotel they were staying in, a court heard.

The incident, which happened while the couple were at a London hotel, was described by a judge as “thoroughly anti-social”.

Nwaiwu, 28, who lives at Avenue de Gien, Malmesbury, and models under the name of Katrina Wild, had flown into a rage during a domestic row with her husband.

The incident was so serious that fellow hotel guests called the police and the manager tried to intervene, Hammersmith Magistrates’ Court was told.

The model, who has posed for magazines including Fiesta, Knave and Escort, was conditionally discharged for 12 months and ordered to pay £400 costs and a £15 victim surcharge.

Nwaiwu pleaded guilty on Tuesday to assaulting her husband, Chukwudi Nwaiwu, and the hotel manager Boris Vasquez-Gallo, by beating, at the Kensington Close Hotel, Kensington, on January 24.

A charge of assaulting one of the police officers who arrived at the hotel was dropped.

Timothy Godfrey, deputy district judge, said: “You behaved in a thoroughly anti-social way that was serious enough to upset other hotel guests who complained.

“This stemmed from you losing your temper with your husband in your room and you assaulted him and the manager, who was only doing his job.”

Nwaiwu only pleaded guilty to the charges after viewing CCTV evidence, which showed her violently grabbing her husband and pushing the manager in the corridor.

Prosecutor Vijay Khuttan told the court that the defendant also aimed kicks at her husband, who she became angry with when he told her he was “leaving” during a row.

Mr Khuttan said: “As the husband was leaving the hotel she assaulted him and pushed the manager in the process of trying to get to the fire escape.

“It is a push to the shoulder against the fire exit door, there is no great force as she was trying to push him out of the way, but he had some bruising, which was pointed out by someone else.”

The court heard that first-time offender Nwaiwu, who makes £25,000 a year from her modelling work, blamed pre-menstrual syndrome for her behaviour.

“I take that into account, but it is no excuse,” Mr Godfrey told her.

No orders were made for compensation.