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"You hear so many people say it's like a fish out of water and truly that's a good explanation," says Byram. "And you feel like you're grasping for every bit of air you can get."
Byram is being tested to make sure her lung function is strong enough to be put to sleep for the surgery.
"Once you have it, you won't need it again ever," says Vanderbilt Bronchoscopy Director Dr. Otis Rickman.
Bronchial thermoplasty works, doctors say, a lot like a microwave, delivering radio frequency energy to the affected airway.
"It basically warms up enough to destroy the smooth muscle that causes the constriction in asthma, but not enough to burn or char anything," says Dr. Rickman. "But the right amount at the right time."
Byram has been suffering with the chronic disease since her teens, and has now maxed out on every medicine and therapy that's available. This makes her a perfect candidate for this breakthrough procedure, reserved for the very worst cases of asthma.
"It's a constant problem," says Byram. "I'm attached to my nebulizer at home and O2 at night. On days like this I have to stay in the house because going outside smothers me to death. It's impossible. There's no real quality of life right now. It's pretty miserable."
She's gotten to the point where she's willing to try something that's brand new, that's only been studied 7 years.
"That was one of the main concerns is will this scar my airway and I'll have a problem later on?" says Dr. Rickman. "Well, at least for 7 years we know that is not the case."
With this breakthrough treatment, trips to the emergency room for those in the study dropped 84% and sick days at work dropped 66%.
"It's an outstanding opportunity to hopefully not fix me, but make me better so I can have quality of life," says Byram.
The procedure requires 3 treatments under sedation, and many patients may still require a daily maintenance medication for asthma.
Thursday, July 5 2012, 07:44 PM CDT
Tennessee News
Work beginning on Civil War park in Knoxville
May 18, 2013 13:12 GMT
KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (AP) -- A Civil War landmark in East Tennessee will soon become a low-impact park that allows public access and preserves the area's historical integrity.
High Ground Park is being created at the site of Fort Higley in south Knoxville, which was manned by Union soldiers during the Siege of Knoxville in 1863.
The Knoxville News Sentinel (http://bit.ly/11Vb6XJ) reports the park is scheduled to open on Nov. 27, which is the 150th anniversary of the construction of Fort Higley.
Bob Young, who has been involved in the effort to preserve the site, says it is "a treasure."
Information from: Knoxville News Sentinel, http://www.knoxnews.com
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