Gail’s Story
“Two years after having Zephyr Valves, I’m still going strong! The valves gave me my life back!”
Procedure Details:
Age at Treatment: 61
Hospital: Froedtert Memorial Hospital/Medical College of Wisconsin
Date of Procedure: August 2020
Gail’s Story
“Two years after having Zephyr Valves, I’m still going strong! The valves gave me my life back!”
Procedure Details:
Age at Treatment: 61
Date of Procedure: August 2020
Hospital: Froedtert Memorial Hospital/Medical College of Wisconsin
Hometown: Racine, Wisconsin
Life Before Zephyr® Valves:
I was diagnosed with COPD in 2002, but it took me seven years to quit smoking. I tried everything! What finally did it was a coughing fit so severe that I didn’t think I’d catch my breath and come out of it. I put my faith in God and quit that day. I succeeded by sheer determination and great support from my husband and kids. But even though I quit smoking, I did not see a lot of improvement. I was having trouble breathing and it just got worse and worse every year. In 2012 I saw a pulmonologist for the first time, and he gave me five years to live.
I was a carpenter, and we owned our own business. After having children, I worked at home and ran the office. As my emphysema worsened, I couldn’t walk from the house to the mailbox without having to stop a couple of times to catch my breath. A year prior to receiving valves, I was in bad shape. I went on oxygen when sleeping because my stats would drop to 81 during the night. Shortly after, I was on oxygen full time. I hated it. It was so clumsy and awkward carrying that concentrator around, but I needed it 24/7, even if I was just working in the yard.
Eventually, I couldn’t drive or even vacuum which was very sad. My disease seemed to be progressing faster and our family life suffered for it. I couldn’t do a lot with my kids anymore, like Girl Scout activities, riding 4-wheelers, and going to Florida on vacation. I couldn’t go outside in the humidity. Any activity would stop me in my tracks. Eventually I couldn’t do anything and that left me feeling guilty and depressed. I felt like an invalid, always needing someone to go get stuff.
Fortunately for me, it was my pulmonologist who told me what great things they were doing at Froedtert, specifically the valve program there. We talked about that being an option for me. I was willing to try anything that would help me breathe better. I went there for testing and was approved to get Zephyr Valves.
I have three grandkids, aged three, six, and eight years old. I can babysit them full time. We go to the zoo, swim in the pool, and they have a sleepover every week.
– Gail
The Day of the Procedure
Life After Zephyr Valves:
I had the procedure with no complications. It took a couple of days for me to notice a difference. I think I had been on edge, scared to breathe. Then I relaxed a little and thought, “I think I can breathe better.” I went home but remained on oxygen.
The difference in my breathing really became apparent shortly after my procedure. My husband was in the yard, and I needed to get something to him quickly, so I ran. When I reached him, I was laughing and saying, “I ran and I’m ok!” I began noticing that my oxygen levels were not dipping when active, so I started to forgo my oxygen.
Three weeks after having my valves, I had my checkup and my doctor did a CT, PFT, and a walk test. I left the pulmonologist’s office that day without my oxygen. I didn’t need it anymore!
I still use my inhalers on the same dose as before valves, but we may try lowering one of them. Now my oxygen level is 96 consistently and I can walk 5x further than I could before having valves. I have had a checkup with the doctor every six months. My FEV1 improved from 37% to 56% and my 6MWD went from 320m to 440m.
My kids noticed that I “sound like my old self.” My voice is a lot stronger, and I am back to singing in the choir and singing karaoke. I don’t even need to take a break! It’s amazing. I am not afraid of going places and I don’t use my handicap sign anymore.
The valves gave me my life back. I have three grandkids aged three, six, and eight years old. I can babysit them full time. We go to the zoo, swim in the pool, and they have a sleepover every week. Recently I played kickball with them, and I was all good! My daughters and I have a tradition of doing the electric slide at every wedding we attend. In July, I attended one and I stayed out on that dance floor the whole time with my daughters.
When I left my last appointment, I said to everyone in the waiting room, “If any of you are here for severe COPD/emphysema and have the option, get valves…don’t put it off. At least entertain the option. My whole life — my mental health and the lives of my family, all changed for the better.
Results may vary.
Caution: Federal law restricts this device to sale by or on the order of a physician.
¹Criner, G et al. Am J Resp Crit Care Med. 2018; 198(9):1151‒1164.
US-EN-1694-v1
What is the Zephyr Valve procedure?
The Zephyr Valve has been shown to help patients breathe easier, do more, and enjoy life.1
Despite taking the best available medications, many patients with severe COPD/emphysema suffer from hyperinflation of their lungs where air becomes trapped in the lungs, preventing fresh air from entering and thereby causing severe shortness of breath.
The Zephyr Valves reduce lung hyperinflation by allowing trapped air to escape and preventing new air from entering that diseased lobe. This allows the healthier parts of the lung to function better and results in patients being able to breathe more easily and experience less shortness of breath.
The valves are placed via bronchoscopy, with no incision or cutting, so these benefits are achieved without the risks of traditional surgical options. The procedure is usually complete in under an hour.
Complications of the Zephyr Endobronchial Valve treatment can include but are not limited to pneumothorax, worsening of COPD symptoms, hemoptysis, pneumonia, dyspnea and, in rare cases, death.
-
I was diagnosed with COPD in 2002, but it took me seven years to quit smoking. I tried everything! What finally did it was a coughing fit so severe that I didn’t think I’d catch my breath and come out of it. I put my faith in God and quit that day. I succeeded by sheer determination and great support from my husband and kids. But even though I quit smoking, I did not see a lot of improvement. I was having trouble breathing and it just got worse and worse every year. In 2012 I saw a pulmonologist for the first time, and he gave me five years to live.
I was a carpenter, and we owned our own business. After having children, I worked at home and ran the office. As my emphysema worsened, I couldn’t walk from the house to the mailbox without having to stop a couple of times to catch my breath. A year prior to receiving valves, I was in bad shape. I went on oxygen when sleeping because my stats would drop to 81 during the night. Shortly after, I was on oxygen full time. I hated it. It was so clumsy and awkward carrying that concentrator around, but I needed it 24/7, even if I was just working in the yard.
Eventually, I couldn’t drive or even vacuum which was very sad. My disease seemed to be progressing faster and our family life suffered for it. I couldn’t do a lot with my kids anymore, like Girl Scout activities, riding 4-wheelers, and going to Florida on vacation. I couldn’t go outside in the humidity. Any activity would stop me in my tracks. Eventually I couldn’t do anything and that left me feeling guilty and depressed. I felt like an invalid, always needing someone to go get stuff.
Fortunately for me, it was my pulmonologist who told me what great things they were doing at Froedtert, specifically the valve program there. We talked about that being an option for me. I was willing to try anything that would help me breathe better. I went there for testing and was approved to get Zephyr Valves.
I was not on oxygen yet but I was getting very discouraged at the decline I was seeing. On a trip in 2018, I ended up in the ER having breathing treatments. My general practitioner, Dr. Cressa Perish, referred me to Dr. Steve White at University of Chicago Medical Center. He told me “it’s only going to get worse.” I told him I was ready to try something, even if it was a newer option.
In 2019, Dr. White introduced me to his colleague Dr. Kyle Hogarth who had studied the newly FDA-approved Zephyr Valves. Once Dr. Hogarth explained how the valves worked I was 100% ready to try them. He had to do some tests to see if I was a candidate, but I was hopeful that this would give me some of my life back.
-
I had the procedure with no complications. It took a couple of days for me to notice a difference. I think I had been on edge, scared to breathe. Then I relaxed a little and thought, “I think I can breathe better.” I went home but remained on oxygen.
The difference in my breathing really became apparent shortly after my procedure. My husband was in the yard, and I needed to get something to him quickly, so I ran. When I reached him, I was laughing and saying, “I ran and I’m ok!” I began noticing that my oxygen levels were not dipping when active, so I started to forgo my oxygen.
Three weeks after having my valves, I had my checkup and my doctor did a CT, PFT, and a walk test. I left the pulmonologist’s office that day without my oxygen. I didn’t need it anymore!
I still use my inhalers on the same dose as before valves, but we may try lowering one of them. Now my oxygen level is 96 consistently and I can walk 5x further than I could before having valves. I have had a checkup with the doctor every six months. My FEV1 improved from 37% to 56% and my 6MWD went from 320m to 440m.
My kids noticed that I “sound like my old self.” My voice is a lot stronger, and I am back to singing in the choir and singing karaoke. I don’t even need to take a break! It’s amazing. I am not afraid of going places and I don’t use my handicap sign anymore.
The valves gave me my life back. I have three grandkids aged three, six, and eight years old. I can babysit them full time. We go to the zoo, swim in the pool, and they have a sleepover every week. Recently I played kickball with them, and I was all good! My daughters and I have a tradition of doing the electric slide at every wedding we attend. In July, I attended one and I stayed out on that dance floor the whole time with my daughters.
When I left my last appointment, I said to everyone in the waiting room, “If any of you are here for severe COPD/emphysema and have the option, get valves…don’t put it off. At least entertain the option. My whole life — my mental health and the lives of my family, all changed for the better.
-
The Zephyr Valve has been shown to help patients breathe easier, do more, and enjoy life.1
Despite taking the best available medications, many patients with emphysema, a common form of COPD, suffer from hyperinflation of their lungs where air becomes trapped in the lungs, preventing fresh air from entering and thereby causing severe shortness of breath.
The Zephyr Valves reduce lung hyperinflation by allowing trapped air to escape and preventing new air from entering that diseased lobe. This allows the healthier parts of the lung to function better and results in patients being able to breathe more easily and experience less shortness of breath.
The valves are placed via bronchoscopy, with no incision or cutting, so these benefits are achieved without the risks of traditional surgical options. The procedure is usually complete in under an hour.
Results may vary.
Caution: Federal law restricts this device to sale by or on the order of a physician.
¹Criner, G et al. Am J Resp Crit Care Med. 2018; 198(9):1151‒1164.
I have three grandkids, aged three, six, and eight years old. I can babysit them full time. We go to the zoo, swim in the pool, and they have a sleepover every week.
– Gail