{"id":69109,"date":"2023-12-02T16:13:05","date_gmt":"2023-12-02T16:13:05","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/newcelebworld.com\/?p=69109"},"modified":"2023-12-02T16:13:05","modified_gmt":"2023-12-02T16:13:05","slug":"super-fit-yoga-teacher-stunned-when-doctors-revealed-she-had-deadly-lungs-of-an-80-year-old-the-sun","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/newcelebworld.com\/lifestyle\/super-fit-yoga-teacher-stunned-when-doctors-revealed-she-had-deadly-lungs-of-an-80-year-old-the-sun\/","title":{"rendered":"Super-fit yoga teacher stunned when doctors revealed she had 'deadly lungs of an 80-year-old' | The Sun"},"content":{"rendered":"
YOGA instructor Anita Brough had no idea what COPD was \u2013 until she was diagnosed with the incurable lung condition aged just 48.<\/p>\n
She said: "I\u2019d been breathless for months and just put it down to stress.<\/p>\n
\n<\/p>\n
"Finding out I had a killer respiratory disease was devastating – especially as my lungs were so damaged. <\/p>\n
"They looked on scans like they were 30 years older than the rest of me."<\/p>\n
COPD, or chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, makes it difficult to breathe air out because either the airways are permanently inflamed and narrowed or air gets trapped in the lungs.\u00a0<\/p>\n
Despite affecting 1.5million people in the UK, and being the third biggest killer in the world, awareness of the classic tell-tale symptoms – breathlessness, a constant cough, wheezing and excess mucus \u2013 is pitifully low.<\/p>\n
"I just had no idea," says now-58-year-old Anita, who had been breathless and coughing for months before she finally saw her GP.\u00a0<\/p>\n
"I\u2019d urge anyone who is frequently out of breath to see their doctor urgently."<\/p>\n
Although there is no cure for COPD, early treatment can slow down lung damage.<\/p>\n
At the time of her diagnosis in 2013, Anita was going through a stressful time, looking after a sick relative.<\/p>\n
<\/picture>BUG BEAR <\/span><\/p>\n <\/span><\/p>\n <\/picture>BUG FEARS <\/span><\/p>\n <\/span><\/p>\n <\/picture>LAND OF NOD <\/span><\/p>\n <\/span><\/p>\n <\/picture>BUG FEARS<\/span><\/p>\n <\/span><\/p>\n "My own health really wasn\u2019t on my radar," she said.<\/p>\n "Besides, I\u2019d never had to worry as I\u2019d always been so fit and full of energy. <\/p>\n "For years I did bootcamp and trampolining classes three or four times a year.<\/p>\n "One night, I was visiting the hospital when I suddenly realised I was struggling to get up the flight of stairs to the ward."<\/p>\n It was a moment of clarity for Anita who months earlier had been able to race up them.<\/p>\n Unable to ignore her symptoms any longer, Anita visited her GP and was referred to a respiratory consultant for lung tests.<\/p>\n Her diagnosis came as a terrible shock.\u00a0<\/p>\n She said: "Being told I had an incurable lung condition was like being punched in the stomach.<\/p>\n "But when tests showed I had the lungs of an 80-year-old woman, that just left me reeling."<\/p>\n What made things worse for Anita was learning her condition had such a strong link to smoking.\u00a0<\/p>\n For 20 years, she\u2019d been a social smoker \u2013 although she rarely had more than five cigarettes a day.<\/p>\n She said: \u201cHaving that diagnosis was like wearing a badge of shame that said, 'I\u2019ve got a horrible illness and it\u2019s all my fault'.<\/p>\n "It didn\u2019t feel fair as smoking is an addiction like any other."<\/p>\n I literally went from being this award-winning businesswoman to being too afraid to leave the house.<\/p>\n Although tobacco is the main cause of COPD, with research from the charity Asthma + Lung UK revealing that almost nine out of 10 people with the condition have a history of smoking, there are other causes too, such as childhood deprivation and exposure to toxic fumes at work.<\/p>\n "COPD is often referred to as \u2018the smoker\u2019s disease\u2019 and there\u2019s a terrible stigma attached to that," said Anita, who strongly supports government plans to create a smoke-generation by raising the legal age for buying tobacco by one year every year.\u00a0<\/p>\n For Anita, the main thing she felt after her diagnosis was fear not shame.<\/p>\n "I literally went from being this award-winning businesswoman to being too afraid to leave the house," she said.<\/p>\n "I used to speak at huge conferences, but as my breathing got worse, the thought of being on stage and not being able to get my words out really terrified me.<\/p>\n "It felt like there was this permanent cord around my chest that was being pulled tighter and tighter every day. <\/p>\n "I was so scared of doing all the things I used to love as I had visions of ending up in hospital on an oxygen machine. <\/p>\n "The illness completely changed me."<\/p>\n Her fear wasn\u2019t entirely misplaced. Although little known, COPD is the leading cause of emergency hospital admissions in the UK, and costs almost 27,000 lives a year.<\/p>\n Over those next few years, Anita had several serious chest infections, or \u2018exacerbations\u2019, which would often land her in bed for three weeks at a time.<\/p>\n She said: "It was like breathing through a straw. I constantly felt like I was drowning."<\/p>\n By then, exercise was a thing of the past. Once a trim size eight, over the next five years, Anita ballooned to a size 18.<\/p>\n Then one day in 2017, as she was sorting through her wardrobe, preparing to throw her \u2018thin\u2019 clothes out, she had an epiphany.<\/p>\n "I\u2019d let lung disease change who I was, and how I looked. Suddenly my mind just screamed, 'No!," she said. <\/p>\n Determined to get her life back on track, Anita, who lives with her husband Mark in Sheffield, joined a local walking group. <\/p>\n She also completed a course of pulmonary rehabilitation \u2013 an exercise and lifestyle programme that helps people with COPD to control their breathing.<\/p>\n "It was tiny steps at first, but it felt fantastic to be active again," said Anita, who also found solace in her local Asthma + Lung UK Breathe Easy group.<\/p>\n "Nobody seems to know what COPD is unless they know someone with the condition so it was brilliant to have that support."<\/p>\n I\u2019m learning to embrace a new life within my limitations. I feel lucky to have that chance.<\/p>\n Over that next year, Anita shed two and a half stone and took up yoga.<\/p>\n "I started to feel so much better," said Anita, whose latest tests showed she had miraculously shaved 12 years off her lung age.<\/p>\n Nevertheless, living with a serious lung condition wasn\u2019t easy.<\/p>\n Unable to speak publicly for fear of losing her breath, Anita had to give up her business, and take on a less demanding role. <\/p>\n In 2020, she made the decision to give up work altogether, and has retrained as a yoga instructor.<\/p>\n Since then, she has focused on her fitness and her family, and thankfully, is still able to run around after her three young granddaughters.<\/p>\n Anita does not need medication and has never been admitted to hospital with her symptoms \u2013 something she attributes to her commitment to exercise and yogic breath work.<\/p>\n She now does seven-mile walks three times a week, and loves all forms of yoga, including aerial yoga \u2013 which involves hanging from a hammock.<\/p>\n Her dream is to start teaching everything she has learnt over the years to other people with lung disease.<\/p>\nCan you spot the difference between a cold, Covid and swine flu? 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