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HIGHLAND LAKES - 2006 began with despair for the Ryan family of Highland Lakes. By the end of the year, it was filled with hope.
Last
February, the Ryan’s oldest son, Michael, then 18, was taking his
first snowboarding run of the day at Loon Mountain in New Hampshire
with his brother, Eric, 15, and friend C.J. when he overshot a jump and
landed on his back, shattering his tenth vertebra. A few hours later,
doctors at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston told
Michael’s parents, Mike and Kim, that their son had severed his
spinal cord and would never walk again.
The doctors were wrong.
As they discovered during surgery to stabilize his spine the following
day, Michael’s spinal cord was bruised and compressed, but not
torn. Doctors then told the Ryans that it could take anywhere from six
months to two years for the swelling around the spinal cord to go down,
offering the family some hope that Michael might one day regain feeling
in his legs.
After several more surgical procedures last winter,
including a blood and tissue transplant aimed at promoting cell
regeneration around the site of the injury, Michael, now 19, has
undergone months of physical therapy at Kessler Institute of
Rehabilitation in West Orange to develop his upper-body strength.
In
September, Michael began participating in a program at the
Children’s Specialized Hospital in Mountainside, N.J., designed
for children and young adults with spinal cord injuries. Under the
so-called Functional Electrical Stimulation study, which is intended to
build up leg muscles for people with such injuries, Michael and other
patients use custom-made exercise bicycles equipped with electrical
stimulation pads attached to parts of their legs to stimulate nerve
endings and enable them to ride the bikes for 30-minute sessions three
times a week. At this point, the machine is working Michael’s leg
muscles, explains dad Mike. But he’s still new to the program.
The
FES program has helped Michael keep his leg muscles from atrophying
while maintaining his bone density. Both were important factors needed
to help qualify him for Project Walk, an intensive exercise-based
spinal cord injury recovery center in Carlsbad, Calif. Unlike most
other spinal cord injury treatment centers, which focus on preparing
paraplegics and quadriplegics for life in a wheelchair, Project Walk is
intended to help people with such injuries to regain the use of their
limbs.
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To
help pay for the trip, countless Vernon residents stepped up over the
summer to organize fundraisers on Michael’s behalf. In July, the
Vernon Police Athletic League ran a series of one-day lacrosse camps at
Maple Grange Community Park. Brittany Marinaro of the Wallkill Valley
Swim Conference organized a swim-a-thon. Later that month, a
beefsteak/tricky tray was held at the VFW hall on Route 94.
“So
many people and business made donations. I wish I could sit down and
write everyone a ‘Thank You’ note but there have just been
so many people; it’s incredible,” said Kim Ryan.
Then
in August, a golf outing at Great Gorge Golf Club on Route 517 drew
nearly 100 duffers. Plus, Nearly New Consignments, a store that opened
in Vernon over the summer, donated 10 percent of its August sales to
Michael.
The fundraisers drew enough support to send Michael,
Kim and Mike to California for a two-week session at Project Walk.
After arriving and settling into the condo they’d rented, Michael
met with the owner of Project Walk along with his personal trainer,
Chris. Chris explained that he wanted to focus on the part of
Michael’s body where functioning stops and non-functioning begins
to concentrate on stimulating and activating nerve endings from that
point down. This would be done through thousands of repetitions of
exercises and stretches, Chris explained.
On the second day of
Michael’s visit, his feet were placed on a Power Plate machine.
This is like a vibrating disc that’s used to promote blood flow
throughout the legs.
“I could feel my leg muscles tingling on the Power Plate,” recalled Michael.
After
using the machine, Michael worked with Chris on a set of resistance
stretches, where Michael laid on his side and tried to move his leg
into a bent position with Chris’ assistance. After doing this 20
or 30 times, Chris asked Michael to push hard and move his leg. With no
assistance from Chris, Michael concentrated and moved his leg backwards
under his own power.
It happened just that one time during the
two weeks Michael spent at Project Walk. But for Michael and the rest
of his family, “it was incredible,” he said. “I
didn’t even know I was moving muscles on my own. The trainer was
pulling my knee up to my chest and then he asked me to do it and I
did.”
“I thought I was seeing things,” recalled Kim.
“When Michael pulled his leg up, we could feel the muscles tensing in his back,” says dad Mike.
One
of the theories espoused by the Project Walk trainers is that through
constant repetition, the human body will relearn motions in limbs that
have stopped working, said Mike.
Since returning from
California, Michael has resumed his physical therapy sessions at
Kessler and the FES program in Mountainside. Kim says a facility that
is loosely connected with Project Walk is expected to open in
Bloomingdale, N.J., in a few months, offering Michael and other people
with spinal cord injuries a local option for treatment. Meanwhile,
Michael is planning to return by himself to Project Walk in California,
perhaps in March, and has recently begun using a spin bike donated by
one of Mike’s co-workers at Prudential Financial, Inc. of
Roseland. Another Vernon resident, Mike Rizzo, donated a wheelchair
lift that has made it much easier for Michael to go up and down the
stairs in his house.
“There aren’t enough facilities
around here for spinal cord injuries,” said dad Mike. He’s
hopeful that Michael’s current exercise regimen will keep his
muscles limber and his bone density high so that his son may one day be
a top candidate for a stem cell procedure aimed at regenerating spinal
cord tissue.
In the meantime, Michael remains busy and
optimistic. He went skydiving in October at Skydive Sussex. That same
month, he earned his driver’s license and is looking for a truck
that he can have modified. “I’m looking forward to getting
my truck and getting my independence back,” he said.
For more information about Mike Ryan, go to http://shredformikey.com,
a Web site about him that was developed by his dad. The site contains
detailed information about Mike’s injury and recovery, a photo
album and a blog from his visit at Project Walk.