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A Kentucky woman thought she was going to the doctor for a cold but was diagnosed with an infection that put her in the hospital for 16 months and claimed her life.
Teacher Emily Presley, 46, went to the doctor in May of 2022 with cold-like symptoms. Her husband said before that she was a 'picture of health' who rarely got sick.
She ended up in the hospital after developing a severe infection. She spent four months on an advanced ventilator that did the work of her heart and lungs.
Presley eventually suffered from infections that compromised her lungs and had a virus that caused inflammation throughout her body. In October 2022, she had to go through a pair of double lung transplants within days of each other.
'Time after time she defied the odds,' husband Jeff Presley told the Lexington Herald-Leader. 'Who could possibly overcome such a trial. Emily.'
Sadly, while Emily fought, her body could not and she died this week.
Teacher Emily Presley, 46, went to the doctor in May of 2022 with cold-like symptoms . Her husband said before that, she was a 'picture of health' who rarely got sick
She ended up in the hospital after developing a severe infection. She spent four months on an advanced ventilator that did the work of her heart and lungs
In October 2022, she had to go through a pair of double lung transplants within days of each other
Emily spent her time impacting her students and the staff at Wellington Elementary in Lexington, Kentucky, - as well as in her own family - before she fell ill.
On May 22, 2022, with a supposed cold, she was taken to the hospital as her blood pressure crashed, her heart rate spiked and her oxygen was low. She was sedated and put in a medically induced coma.
Her condition did not improve and she transferred hospitals as her lungs could not oxygenate her body.
She needed new lungs and had her first transplant. Presley's immune system reacted negatively to proteins from the new lungs and she was recommended to have them removed and listed for a transplant again.
'I told the medical team that Emily and I love our life together. We love our friends. We love our community. So if there's a chance that she can survive and have good quality of life, then the answer to a second transplant is "yes,"' Jeff Presley said.
Within 24 hours, she'd received another match and the transplant had been successful. That allowed her to head home for Thanksgiving 2023.
'In the midst of agony…there was no defeat,' Jeff said. 'Instead, the nurses, the doctors, the (therapists) they’d see a smile.
'They would hear "thank you." They would be inspired. They would tell others about this amazing, powerful, wonderful, gracious woman of God that would not give up. Because she was on a mission. A mission to return home with her family in Lexington, Kentucky.'
She celebrated the holiday with her husband and their two children.
'I have so much to be thankful for this Thanksgiving and I'm so glad my Northwestern Medicine lung transplant team could get me home to share that gratitude with my family, my friends and the Lexington community,' Emily Presley said at the time.
'It's wonderful to be home with my kids and my dog.'
While she had plans to return to teaching, her health took a turn for the worse again.
Emily spent her time impacting her students and the staff at Wellington Elementary in Lexington, Kentucky, - as well as in her own family - before she fell ill
After her second lung transplant, she was able to go home and spend Thanksgiving at home with her family
While she had plans to return to teaching, her health took a turn for the worse again
Her family confirmed she died surrounded by loved ones around 4am Tuesday morning.
'She was ready. She was prepared. And it took all she had,' Jeff said.
Her husband and two teenage children had been helped throughout this ordeal with a GoFundMe that drew over $100,000 in donations.
The family will be celebrating her life over the weekend with an open house on Saturday followed by a memorial service. The family requested attendees wear bright colors to 'represent such a brilliant life.'
'Emily’s radiance went such a long way and impacted people so deeply,' sister Leslie Cunningham said.