When it came to ‘quilting’ my lungs, I chose lifestyle seams over pleurodesis
Reports of complications from the use of talc made me wary
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When the word pleurodesis first entered my life, it was not abstract, but was tethered to the reality of three pneumothoraces since 2010. Each lung collapse was a reminder of how suddenly breath could be stolen, how fragile the lung’s tether to the chest wall could be.
Doctors explained the procedure as a way of fusing the lung to the chest cavity, sealing off the space so air could no longer escape. For many patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), this offers stability — no more sudden collapses, no more fluid pooling, no more fear of the next breath failing. It is a procedure considered when the body insists on unpredictability, when the risk of recurrence outweighs the hope of chance.
As the procedure was being explained to me, one of my hobbies came to mind: quilting. They were going to quilt my lungs and my chest cavity together.
Stitching a different quilt
When my pulmonologist and I had the discussion, we also looked at the risks, as the use of talc had come under scrutiny because of the association of talc in body powder and cancer risks.
Yet the history of pleurodesis is inseparable from talc. In earlier years, talc was the agent most often used to inflame and bind the pleural layers.
But the talc of that time was ungraded, unpurified, carrying particles that could scatter beyond their intended target. Reports of complications — respiratory distress, scarring that reached too far — made me wary. My doctor explained the risks, and I chose another path.
Instead of fusion, I stitched together my own quilt of adaptation: I gained weight to protect fragile tissue, I avoided flying where pressure shifts could undo me, and I gave up scuba diving where the depths could betray me. These were not small sacrifices, but they were my way of holding the seams together without the needle of talc.
Pleurodesis remains, even now, a powerful tool. Modern medicine has refined it, using purified talc with safer particle sizes, reducing the dangers that once haunted its name. Many patients find freedom in its permanence, a one‑time stitching that lets them breathe without fear of recurrence. But for me, the metaphor of quilting became more than a procedure — it became a way of living. Each adaptation was a seam, each sacrifice a thread, each breath a reminder that healing can be found not only in surgery, but in the discipline of restraint.
Pleurodesis is not just a medical act; it is a story of binding, of choosing permanence over risk. For some, it is the right choice, a quilt sewn by talc and inflammation. For others, like me, it’s a reminder that sometimes the body can be stitched together by choices instead — by weight gained, by flights declined, by dives left undone.
The quilt of recovery is not always sewn in the operating room. Sometimes it is pieced together in daily life, in the quiet decisions that hold breath steady against the tide of collapse.
Note: COPD News Today is strictly a news and information website about the disease. It does not provide medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. This content is not intended to be a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always consult your physician or other qualified healthcare provider with any questions you may have regarding a medical condition. Never disregard professional medical advice or delay in seeking it because of something you have read on this website. The opinions expressed in this column are not those of COPD News Today or its parent company, Bionews, and are intended to spark discussion about issues about chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.



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