Saskatoon StarPhoenix

A NEW LEASE ON LIFE

- JENNIFER ACKERMAN jackerman@postmedia.com

Charlotte L’Oste-Brown sits in her SUV near her daughter’s home. L’Oste-Brown received a double-lung transplant in Edmonton about three months ago.

While women around the world were getting breakfast in bed and being pampered by their loved ones, Charlotte L’Oste-Brown spent her Mother’s Day receiving a double lung transplant.

Three months later, she is well on the road to recovery and learning to enjoy the simple pleasure in life again.

“It’s the simple things like going out and walking the dog with (my daughter). Just returning to do normal things. I haven’t done them for so long,” said L’Oste-Brown.

In 2003, L’Oste-Brown was diagnosed with polymyosit­is — an inflammato­ry disease that causes muscle weakness. Within a year she developed pulmonary fibrosis, an incurable lung disease.

By 2014, she was put on the transplant list where she waited for three years — sitting on the top of the list for two of those years. At 8 a.m. on May 14 she finally received the call.

“I was on my way out to church that morning,” said L’Oste Brown. “I couldn’t believe it. I’d been waiting so long and I remember just saying, ‘Are you kidding me, are you kidding me?’ ”

After calling her daughter, the two hopped on an air ambulance to Edmonton and L’Oste-Brown was in surgery by 4 p.m.

L’Oste-Brown spent the first month of recovery at the hospital in Edmonton. She spent another two months in a rented apartment across the street from the hospital and returned to Regina last week.

L’Oste-Brown’s friend — a retired nurse — volunteere­d to live with and assist her during her time there.

The days during those first three months of recovery were busy ones. L’Oste-Brown had to attend rehabilita­tion and occupation­al therapy five times a week, get blood work done and see the doctor two times a week.

Typically that would fill her day from 6 a.m. to noon. Then she’d have a two- or three-hour nap, wake up for dinner and be back in bed for the night at 8:30 p.m.

“They’ve been a challenge,” L’Oste-Brown says of the first few months of recovery. “Because first you’re in a bed and you can’t move and you’re starting to work with new lungs and all your nerve endings are cut.”

She said her first challenge was learning to use her fingers again, which weren’t working to full capacity after the surgery. Being confined to a bed and needing help for everything was also difficult.

“I think the most challengin­g (part of) recovery was getting to learn to walk. You’re so weak and your knees just buckle,” said L’Oste-Brown.

She also had to relearn how to swallow, which she said was an unexpected part of her recovery.

L’Oste-Brown is living with her daughter Megan until the end of September when she hopes to move into her own apartment. And even though she needs to take breaks here and there, she is able to go out for dinner with her daughter, go for walks and make breakfast without worrying about bringing her oxygen tank along with her. She expects to be fully recovered in about two months.

An advocate for organ donation before her surgery, she is excited to dive back into that work now and educate people on the need for organ donors in the province.

“I wake up every morning and think of my donor,” said L’Oste Brown. “I think of my donor every day and the choice that my donor made to give the gift of life.”

 ?? MICHAEL BELL ??
MICHAEL BELL

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