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Can you imagine living like that?

Can you imagine living like that?
02.12.2013 16:32
Martha Ann Lillard's crippling illness has made her a prisoner in her own home for the last 60 years. Paralyzed by polio at age five, the Oklahoma woman has spent most of her life encased in a 1940s respirator which breathes for her.But the 65-year-old couldn't imagine life any other way.'Some people have said I’d rather die than leave my iron lung, and it makes it sound like I’m not trying to be modern, and it’s not like that at all,' she told NBC News. 'It feels wonderful, actually, if you’re not breathing well. When I was first put into it, it was such a relief. It makes all the difference when you’re not breathing.'Lillard has learned to live with her disease.She taught herself to walk again. While she can leave the 800-pound respirator, she prefers not to.Lillard lies on a goose down comforter inside a long metal cylinder in which she’s enclosed with an airtight seal. Her neck and head sticks out of a foam collar. There are switches inside to allow her to roll a tray-like cot in and out.She lives with her three beagles, and a housemate who helps care for her. She stays in touch with friends by phone and internetLillard owns her iron lung, which runs on a fan belt motor that friends help patch together with car parts when it breaks. She said it's a better option than portable positive pressure ventilators which most polio survivors use. They force air into the lungs, often through a tube in the throat.'If I use the positive pressure vent, I’m not as well rested,' she said.Martha told MailOnline about her experience. 'I was paralyzed all over except my face.I was unconscious & turning blue when they put me in the lung. I was in it for six month in hospital, during which time I learned to breathe for 30 seconds and longer on my own. It was terrifying.W hen you can't breathe much, you can't talk, cry or make a sound. Doctors said I wouldn't ever be out of the lung or walk. I was determined to do both!'She says that after the time she spent in hospital she regained 25% of her breathing and after a year of work she learned to walk. 'I would love to not need any vent & would like not to have the weakening that comes with Post-Poilo Syndrome. I can't use other types of ventilators because of inflammation that comes with Polio. I could be more rested if I stayed in the lung full time. But I choose to be up as much as possible.Get the vaccine!'Lillard considers herself an anomaly in a U.S. society that barely remembers the scourge of polio - a viral infection of the spinal cord that mainly affected young children.But with reports polio has reared its ugly head in Syria and Cameroon, Lillard wants to make sure that people never forget.'I think the word is to get your child vaccinated. Why would we let somebody have to go back through that again?' she said.'If my mother would have had the opportunity to give me the vaccine, she would have done that.'Lillard was a kindergartner in 1953 when she woke up with a sore throat that quickly progressed to poliovirus. The virus is transmitted through contaminated food and water.'The night before I was paralyzed, the neighbor children ate out of the same bowl of pancake batter that I did,' Lillard said. 'They just had to pray that nobody got it.'The first known outbreak of polio in the U.S. was in 1894 in Vermont. In 1952, a record 57,628 cases of polio were reported in the U.S.(dailymail.co.uk)ANN.Az
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