Medicine Hat News

Maple Leafs great Salming receives ALS diagnosis

-

Former Toronto Maple Leafs defenceman Borje Salming has been diagnosed with amyotrophi­c lateral sclerosis, also known as ALS or Lou Gehrig’s disease, the team announced Wednesday.

“I have received news that has shaken my family and me,” Salming said in a statement. “In an instant, everything changed.”

Salming, who played 16 seasons with the Leafs (1973-1989) and was inducted into the Hockey Hall of Fame in 1996, said he recognizes that there is no cure for the disease but says there are treatments available to slow the progressio­n.

“I do not know how the days ahead will be, but I understand that there will be challenges greater than anything I have ever faced,” Salming said in a statement. “I also recognize that there is no cure but there are numerous worldwide trials going on and there will be a cure one day.

“Since I started playing ice hockey as a little kid in Kiruna, and throughout my career, I have given it my all. And I will continue to do so.”

ALS is progressiv­e nervous system disease that leads to paralysis, the inability to swallow, respirator­y failure and finally death, usually in two to five years from the onset of symptoms.

Salming, 71, is receiving treatment in his native Sweden, where there are more than 800 patients living with ALS.

“ALS is a devastatin­g disease that not only affects the muscles but can also affect personalit­y and cognitive functions,” Dr. Caroline Ingre, Salming’s physician, said in a statement.

“In about 70 percent of diagnoses, the disease starts with symptoms from the spinal cord, which increasing­ly weakens the patient’s arms and legs, while in about 30 percent it starts around the mouth and throat, leading to slurred speech and difficulti­es swallowing,” she said. “These patients also often have an associated emotional impact that manifests itself as uncontroll­able laughter or crying.”

Ingre, chief physician within the Neurology Department at the Karolinska University Hospital near Stockholm, said most ALS patients experience difficulty breathing, with symptoms most often appearing first at night.

Salming, a pioneering European star, played 1,099 games with the Leafs and ranks fourth among the team’s career scoring leaders with 768 points.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada