
Nick Cordero Will "Most Likely" Need Double Lung Transplant
Muni Long is on the mend.
The "Made For Me" singer revealed that she was given one week to live before undergoing a double lung transplant due to her developing pneumonia while opening for Brandy and Monica's This Boy Is Mine Tour.
"The road is tough even when you are healthy," Long—who was diagnosed with lupus in 2014—told Robin Roberts on the June 23 episode of Good Morning America. "I should have never taken that tour, but there was so much going on in my life where I had to do it."
"Midway through, we're up in the Northeast. It's really cold," she shared. "With autoimmune, the cold is not your friend, so I got really sick. I got pneumonia and I had to step away for a few dates."
Although the 37-year-old returned to the tour—which ran for two months starting in October 2025—she announced her departure Nov. 30, citing ongoing personal health reasons.
"I came home for Thanksgiving and then I woke up in the hospital," she recalled. "They had done whatever they needed to do to just get me stable. Then all the doctors came in, it was like six people: a pulmonologist, a rheumatologist, three pulmonary doctors, the ECMO specialist."
"So, I knew something was wrong," she continued. "They're all like, 'You need a transplant.' I'm like, 'Well, it sounds like you guys have a time. How long do I have to live?' And they go, 'A week.' One week."
Long—mom to 3-year-old Tatum with ex Raysean Hairston—couldn't believe that was her prognosis.
"My jaw dropped. I was like, 'That's rude,'" she explained, adding that the specialists told her, "'Hey, this is not a joke. You need to make a choice. You can either go to hospice or you can get these lungs.'"
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While Long knew her health was declining, she didn't expect her only viable choice to be an organ transplant.
"I knew for a really long time that something was wrong," she said. "Every day, I'm spitting in cups and coughing all the time and trying to take all these medicines to just get through the day. With this industry, you're always in people's faces. I'm taking pictures and I'm huffing and puffing like I just ran a marathon."
As the Grammy winner reflected on the effects that a lung transplant would have on her singing career, she focused on what really mattered to her in that moment.
Phillip Faraone/Getty Images for iHeartRadio
"I look at my son and I think about how much more life that I have to live," she reflected. "I think just quality of life was first, like I can't sing if I'm not here."
Long, however, proved that she was made to sing, making a pitch-perfect recovery.
"I'm doing fabulous," she added. "I'm six months post-op. Actually, tomorrow is my last appointment for all things. Then, I have my vocal checkup in August because I had to have vocal surgery as well."
For more celebs who've shared insight into their health journeys, keep reading.
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