Stents for Emphysema
Reported January 28, 2008
BOSTON, Mass. (Ivanhoe Newswire) — Emphysema is the fourth leading killer in the United States, with more than three million sufferers. While there is no cure, doctors are working on a new technique that may help them breathe better on their own.
For Barbara Greenfield, the simplest chores are taxing. An oxygen tank and cord are now her lifeline. Barbara started smoking at age 15. By time she reached 55, she was up to three packs a day and had early stage emphysema.
“If you think of the lung as something like a sponge, a bath sponge with all the little bubbles, it destroys the walls between those bubbles,” says Armin Ernst, M.D., Chief of Interventional Pulmonology at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center in Boston, Mass.
The destroyed walls make it difficult for patients to exchange oxygen for carbon dioxide.
“I feel like I am suffocating,” Barbara says.
Dr. Ernst is studying a minimally invasive treatment that could help. During the procedure, doctors place a broncoscope through the mouth, then make six small openings openings to help the patient breathe. Stents are then inserted to keep the holes from collapsing.
“The stents are covered with a medication thats called Taxol that is designed to prevent this from happening,” Dr. Ernst says.
Barbaras husband hopes the treatment will help her live more comfortably.
“Theres always the concern of how much it will do to her and ultimately limiting the length of our life together,” Martin Greenfield says.
She hopes shell be breathing a little easier.
“This is my only hope — its not gonna cure me, but it is going to perhaps make my life a little simpler,” Barbara says.
The study is in its early stages and could last several years.
FOR MORE INFORMATION, PLEASE CONTACT:
EASE Stent Trials:
Bronchus Technologies, Inc.
http://www.EASEtrialUS.com
(866) 431-3273