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Mom given 24 months to live hopes for a lung transplant

- By Melanie Ruberti

SENOIA (AP) — Amy Majors can only move 50 feet within the confines of her Senoia home.

Although if the 33-year-old single mother woman stretches far enough, she can reach the carport, where she wistfully watches her young son Michael play outdoors.

Majors is tethered to an oxygen tank 24 hours a day, connected by a tube that is a thin lifeline between her existence and an almost certain death.

The Senoia woman is living on borrowed time. Doctors say she needs a double lung transplant within the next two years.

“If I don’t get the transplant, the doctors give me 24 months,” Majors said.

“I have a 6-year-old. I have too much to do. I’ve got to help him with his homework and go through school. I want to see him go to prom and to college. I want to live.”

Majors has Pulmonary Arterial Hypertensi­on, or PAH, a disease she inherited from her biological mother.

The Senoia native was adopted as a young girl and learned about the disease when she was 13 years old.

According to lung.org, PAH is high blood pressure within the lungs. The disease forms scar tissue in the blood vessels, causing them to narrow and making it harder for blood to flow through the lungs.

Patients with PAH may feel as if they’re slowly suffocatin­g.

Majors was horrified by what she learned, but admitted at that time in her life, she felt invincible.

“When I googled ‘PAH,’ I thought it was the worst thing someone could ever go through,” she said. “But I played sports growing up, softball and volleyball. I thought, ‘I don’t have that.’ I thought I was fine.”

But in 2009, while Majors was 24 weeks pregnant with her first child, something went terribly wrong.

The then-25-year-old woman began fainting with little warning.

She was rushed to Piedmont Fayette hospital and then transferre­d to Piedmont Atlanta. After a series of tests, doctors delivered the devastatin­g diagnosis: Majors had pulmonary arterial hypertensi­on and was going into heart failure.

Specialist­s delivered another traumatic blow when they told Majors she would have to terminate her pregnancy.

“They told me I had seven days to live if I continued to move forward with pregnancy,” she remembered.

Majors spent 16 days in the hospital before being released.

Before she left, doctors inserted a port in her chest, plus gave her equipment that would pump life-saving medication into her body every 45 seconds.

Majors had to learn how to properly mix the medication­s before she went home, she said.

Eventually, her health stabilized. She was able to maintain her PAH symptoms through oral medication­s for the next few years.

In January 2012, Majors and her thenhusban­d found themselves back at Piedmont Atlanta hospital.

This time, it was a joyous occasion. The couple was in the hospital for the birth of their adopted son Michael.

From 2012 until 2016, Majors raised her son while working seven days a week at two different jobs.

In order to keep up her energy levels, doctors placed a new port and catheter in Majors chest, and gave her another medicinal pump.

But beginning in June 2016, Major’s health began to decline after a series of infections within her catheter, also known as a Hickman line, and in her intravenou­s line.

At one point, Majors said she almost bled to death after an open wound wouldn’t stop bleeding.

Infections continued to plague the now-single mother throughout 2017.

Once again, she found herself near death after having a bad reaction to an antibiotic.

“I slowly felt like I was suffocatin­g,” Majors said. “I was looking at the hospital lights, tears rolling down my cheeks and thinking, ‘Is this how it’s going to end? I’m going to suffocate to death?’ Your breathing is cut off before your brain is, so you’re aware of what’s happening, you just can’t breathe.”

After recovering from the allergic reaction, she began coughing up blood.

Doctors rushed her into surgery and discovered some of the arterial vessels inside her lungs had burst, which is not uncommon for patients with PAH.

But they also noticed the disease and the recurring infections were taking a toll on Majors’ lungs and heart.

During a follow up appointmen­t in April 2018, doctors informed Majors her only chance at survival was a double lung transplant.

She said the decision is not just for her, but more as a gift to her 6-year-old son.

“He’s depending on me. He’s my heart, my breath and my everything.”

‘I have a 6-yearold. I have too much to do. I’ve got to help him with his homework and go through school. I want to see him go to prom and to college. I want to live.’ Amy Majors

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