
WLKY.com
LOUISVILLE, Ky. -- Chase Ford's life changed forever on June 4, 2005.
He
fell and hit the back of his head on the wooden arm of a couch at a
baby sitter's, and within days he was paralyzed, unable to move due to
a spinal cord injury.
"How can you tell a child who is active
that he will not be active again based on what the doctors have told
you?" said his mother, Renee.
In stepped researchers from the University of Louisville and Frazier Rehab.
With
funding from the Christopher & Dana Reeve Foundation and support
from the Centers for Disease Control & Prevention, some 25 doctors
and physical therapists have used repetitive activity to redesign
Chase's nervous system, allowing him to walk.
"He still has some
gate deviations, but we're hopeful that those will recover as well,"
said Dr. Susan Harkema, who calls Chase's recovery unprecedented, and
the research breakthrough for anyone dealing with the results of a
spinal cord injury.
Funding is the only thing right now standing in the way of even more success.
That's
why Chase is actually going to take part in this year's Derby Festival
Mini Marathon, hoping other runners or walkers will join his fight.
You
can help if you take part in team reeve in the upcoming mini marathon.
The money that's raised will stay here locally to help people like
Chase.
"We're just continuing to watch and respond to his changes
and modify the program to promote the next level of recovery," said
Harkema. "So, we'll see."
"We would like the opportunity to
finish the job," said Lee Smith, Chase's
Physical Therapist. "He can
stand and he can walk, but I don't believe Chase's recovery is done yet
and we would like to see how far we can go."
Visit Chase's web site
here.