By NANCY YOUNG
The Virginian-Pilot
David
Albright will not miss the Chicken McNuggets. Or the 400-mile round
trip. He will not miss the motel bills or memorizing the graffiti on
overpasses along the way.
Now that a
special bike for people with spinal cord injuries has arrived at a
Virginia Beach facility, he also won't have to miss his workout.
Albright said he
lost the use of his legs during back surgery in August 2004. Last May,
he started working out on an Ergys 2 bike - the same one that
Christopher Reeve used after the actor's horse-riding accident and that
his family donated after his death. The bike uses electrical impulses
to stimulate the muscles to pedal.
Before that,
Albright, 35, would try exercising by pushing his wheelchair around
with his arms, but that wasn't very satisfying.
"The only time I got good sweating was when it was 100 degrees outside," Albright said.
Problem was, the
closest Ergys 2 he could find was Reeve's old bike at the
state-operated Woodrow Wilson Rehabilitation Center in Fishersville,
near Staunton. So he made the trek from his Suffolk home a few times a
month, worked out for an hour one day, had a post-workout snack at a
nearby McDonald's, stayed overnight, then worked out again the next day
before heading home.
"It got to the point where it was starting to get a little expensive, so I went every other week," Albright said.
A couple of weeks ago, an Ergys 2 arrived at Hilltop Therapy Center in Virginia Beach.
"David was here
the next day," said Debbie Kaye, a Physical Therapist at the facility,
part of Sentara Healthcare. A grant from the Commonwealth Neurotrauma
Initiative paid for Ergys 2 bikes in Virginia Beach and a few other
localities in the state, including Richmond and Roanoke.
Kaye said
exercising on the Ergys 2 can help undo some of the effects that
physical inactivity forces on people with spinal cord injuries. It
improves circulation, increases muscle mass, helps control weight -
pretty much what exercise does for everybody.
What's different is this bike is high-tech - and expensive. About $17,000 a pop.
"I wish something
like that was more affordable for everybody," said Scott Dickerson, a
31-year-old who became a Paraplegic at 20 after a car accident. "It'd
be great to just go home and just hook up to that, watch the news and
do 20 miles."
Dickerson had his
first session last week and as Albright told him he would be, he's
addicted. Both started off with the words "it's hard to explain" when
describing how they feel after a workout. While they don't have feeling
in their legs, it's as though they kind of do.
"My legs are
tired now," Albright said Monday after biking 9.8 miles in an hour.
"It's like a new feeling, like you know how when you're standing on
your feet all day?"
"We hope this
wears out from use," Kaye said. After initial training, Hilltop will
treat the bike workouts like clients going to the gym, charging $7 per
workout or 10 for $60.
C ost is still a
barrier for many. Insurance is spotty about covering the training by
health professionals, Kaye said, and in addition to the bike cost,
riders have to buy their own electrodes every couple of months at
roughly $50 a set.
It still seems
like a great deal to Albright, who, after a mere half-hour drive
Monday, hooked up his set of 12 electrodes, got in the bike and started
pedaling. He plans to keep coming three times a week for an hour's
workout, increasing its difficulty as he gets in better and better
shape.
About the only
thing missing is something to watch. The facility has no TV. Albright's
happy listening to his music on his headphones, but if there's ever a
Ergys 3, he knows what he'd add.
"A plasma pop-up."
Reach Nancy Young at (757) 446-2947 or nancy.young@pilotonline.com.
© 2007 HamptonRoads.com/PilotOnline.com