Keeping up with her grandson Justin has not been easy for Linda Creighton.
"I would be completely out of breath," Linda told ABC30.
The ex-3 pack-a-day smoker developed severe emphysema a few years ago and was told a lung transplant was her only option.
"I guess I went into denial because I know I'm not ready to take that kind of a step," Linda said.
Now, Dr. Gerard Criner is testing a new non-invasive treatment.
"It has the potential to be huge," Dr. Gerard Criner, Director, Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine, Director, Temple Lung Center, Temple University School of Medicine, told ABC30.
Doctors use a bronchoscope to deliver 10 tiny coils into the diseased lung. The coils work by compressing the lungs to help restore elasticity.
"When it compresses the lung tissue, it actually re-tensions the lung. That increases the recoil of the lung to expand the small airways," Dr. Criner said.
Patients feel a difference just one hour after the coils are placed; studies done in Europe show an average 18-percent improvement in lung function.
After just one month, Linda could walk 60 percent more than before.
"It really has changed my life. It has given me back a comfortable lifestyle of doing things that I normally wanted to do like taking care of my grandson," Linda said.
Patients in the renew study receive two sets of coils placed four months apart. The multi-center study is currently enrolling patients all over the country. For more information on enrolling, go to: http://clinicaltrials.gov/show/NCT01608490.
If you would like more information, please contact:
Dr. Gerard Criner
Director, Pulmonary and Critical Care Medicine
Director, Temple Lung Center
Temple University School of Medicine
(215) 707-8113