Vancouver Sun

Paralyzed Broncos player to get surgery

- BILL GRAVELAND

CALGARY • A hockey player paralyzed in the Humboldt Broncos bus crash is to leave on a 12,000-kilometre journey to Thailand later this week for surgery that could help restore some of his movement.

And one thing Ryan Straschnit­zki is determined to take with him is his hockey sled.

“I’ll be gone for five weeks,” the 20-year-old told Canadian Press following a gruelling physiother­apy workout. “If you do anything and work at it for so long, and then not do it for a month, you might be a little rusty.”

Straschnit­zki, who is paralyzed from the chest down, hopes to make the national sledge hockey team.

He and 12 others were injured when a semi truck blew through a stop sign and into the path of the Saskatchew­an junior hockey team’s bus in April 2018. Sixteen people died.

Straschnit­zki hopes that an epidural stimulator implanted in his spine will help improve his daily life.

“This is the best technology out there right now for spinal cord injuries. Why not give it a shot?” he said.

“It can bring back certain functions that most people with spinal injuries don’t have: muscle movement, bladder control. It’s little things like that which can make a huge difference.”

After the implant is placed in his back, a small device like a remote control will send electrical currents to his spinal cord to try to stimulate nerves and move limbs.

Uyen Nguyen, executive director of the Synaptic Spinal Cord Injury and Neuro Rehabilita­tion Centre in Calgary, where Straschnit­zki does his physio, said: “We almost look at it as a Band-Aid below the level of injury. The stimulatio­n then comes from the device. The recovery process is relatively straightfo­rward and after a few days he’s able to start rehabilita­tion.”

Michelle Straschnit­zki, Ryan’s mother, said she’s optimistic.

“I’m really excited for him,” she said, speaking from the family’s home in Airdrie, Alta. “I think it’s an incredible opportunit­y and, from all the reports and everything else we’ve seen, it’s only a positive.”

His father, Tom Straschnit­zki, is more cautious.

“We’ll see what this surgery can do for him. I’d just like to see his mid-section going and for him to get a better quality of life.”

 ??  ?? Ryan Straschnit­zki
Ryan Straschnit­zki

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