"I couldn't hold anything down. I ran to the bathroom throwing up," Pitts said. "And I wasn't throwing anything up but chemicals. It tasted like medicine in the back of my throat."
Her fiance, Richard Childers, woke up with a headache and woke up Pitts' 6-year-old stepdaughter.
"It took a while (for Richard) to wake her up. And when she woke, she had a headache," Pitts said.
Childers then called an ambulance, which took Pitts to Summit Medical Center while Childers and the child, who had also thrown up, followed in his vehicle.
At the hospital, Pitts said, doctors found that Pitts had a carbon monoxide level of 25, Childers tested at 20-22 and Pitts' stepdaughter's level was 17. The poison permanently scarred Pitts' lungs.
"My doctor said I was just inches away from the deadly point. I was not comatose, but I couldn't open my eyes," she said.
The family was treated for carbon monoxide poisoning and released from the hospital.
"If it wasn't for her (Miley) waking me up and making me feel the sickness, I would have went to sleep and never woke up," Pitts said.
Arkansas Oklahoma Gas inspected the home and found a leaky home heating unit that Pitts said was "rusted and about to fall through the floor." Pitts said the home was not equipped with a carbon monoxide detector, but her landlord has since installed one and plans to put in a new heater.
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Information from: Southwest Times Record, http://www.swtimes.com/
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