By RYAN AMYS Chronicle Sports Writer
Deirdre Eitel/Chronicle
Ed Scheterlak, Jenny McCune’s husband, teaches a free class at the
Bozeman Yoga Center Tuesday morning during Community Celebration Week
to acknowledge the people who have helped him and McCune after she
suffered a life-altering bicycle accident in July.
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It’s been just over six months since Jenny McCune became a commonality in locals’ hearts and prayers.
On
July 5, the former Gallatin Valley Bike Club president, Team Delphine
rider and long-time Bozeman resident took a corner too wide on her
bicycle, crashed into a ravine and suffered a spinal-cord injury for
which doctors have little understanding and no cure.
In an instant, McCune went from an elite athlete to a woman without movement below her shoulders.
It
was a devastating blow to the community, and proved that the growing
Bozeman area still has the small-town atmosphere, McCune’s
husband, Ed Scheterlak said.
“In
some ways the real story is the way the Bozeman community came
together: the biking people, the people from the Zen community, those
from the environmental community, people from all the gyms,
everybody,” Scheterlak said. “All these people came
together to help raise thousands of dollars for her medical funds and
have given us tremendous support, emotionally.”
Because
of this support and a determined will, McCune can now slowly type on a
keyboard, use her cell phone, feed herself, dress and even walk with
assistance.
This progress has come quickly, far beyond doctors’ expectations.
“She
started off with a power chair,” Scheterlak said through a grin,
“and now the power chair is gathering dust.”
The
jolt of the accident didn’t sever McCune’s spinal cord,
which would have resulted in permanent paralysis. Her spinal cord was
shaken, and this brought intense bruising. However, even with a spinal
cord completely intact, paralysis still set in immediately after the
crash due to swelling and damage to the nerves.
She
stayed in the Bozeman Deaconess intensive care unit for two weeks. When
she was stable enough to be moved to the Craig Hospital in Denver,
McCune could only lift her hand into a thumbs-up position.
The
Craig Hospital’s primary focus is specific research and
Rehabilitation of spinal and traumatic brain injuries, and this is
where advancements to her mobility and morale began.
McCune
began feeding herself finger foods and playing solitaire on the
computer. She started therapy in a pool and got a boost of motivation
from former patients who had suffered similar injuries, yet still
walked out of Craig Hospital.
“I
really need to push harder and be more of an advocate for
myself,” McCune posted Sept. 3 on a web site (www.carepages.com)
that helps connect family and friends during times of injury and
illness. For example, after Labor Day holiday, I am going to push for a
manual chair. Right now they have been emphasizing the motorized one
because it gives me the most mobility, but it is not building up my leg
muscles at all. In a nutshell, I need to become the ‘squeaky
wheel.’”
She
made dramatic improvements in Denver, but after her nearly two-month
stay, she moved to Gainesville, Fla., to live with her cousin.
“She
went to Florida because the university there has a big research center
on spinal-cord injuries, and there’s nothing like that around
here,” Scheterlak said.
McCune
also has been given an opportunity to take part in a study that will
give her top-notch attention in the most recent research.
She
was chosen to become a participant in a study called
‘Lightgate,’ which is an established therapy for people
with spinal injuries, Scheterlak said.
The study is based on two different techniques with a similar overall outcome: to reteach the body to walk.
One-half
of the study will include a treadmill and a harness, which will hold
close to 30 percent of the patient’s weight. One physical
therapist will control the movement of one leg and another therapist
will control the other. A third therapist controls the movement of the
pelvic region, with hopes of simulating the correct posture for walking.
The other side of the study will include a robotic exoskeleton, which will take the place of the three physical therapists.
The study is designed to help determine which theory works best in rehabilitating from a spinal injury.
“We
don’t know which group she will be in,” Scheterlak said.
“Either way, she’s getting training and it doesn’t
cost us anything.”
McCune
has made extreme advancements toward a full recovery. She jokes on one
of her postings that she has become a snowbird, living in Florida
during the winter months. But she has full intention to come full
circle to spend the summer in Bozeman.
By
that point, specialized therapists for spinal injuries won’t be
necessary. She won’t need professionals dealing with spinal
trauma.
At the rate she’s going, the amount of Physical Therapy she will need when she comes home is uncertain.
“Today
I set a new record for walking, hopefully one that I will break in the
near future — perhaps tomorrow. I walked for about an hour today
although it was not continuous,” she posted Dec. 27.
“What seems almost impossible one week is fairly easy, if not downright easy, by the following week.”