Khaleej Times

Space suit therapy helps paralysed toddler walk

- Saman Haziq

dubai — raphael heer, 3, was a stillborn when delivered by caesarian section. the doctors were successful in resuscitat­ing him, but raphael was left paralysed.

what followed for raphael’s parents — daniela and benjamin — was “a year of horror with treatments, doctors, despair and hope”. the initial diagnosis by the doctors was “severe mental and physical disability with epilepsy”, remembers daniela heer.

the family searched for suitable alternativ­e treatments. a year later, the osteopaths managed to release the cramps in his arms but raphael could not stand, walk or sit. finally, the heers were bought to a dubai health authority (dha) approved internatio­nal clinic for intensive neurorehab­ilitation called adeli medical centre, in pieštany, slovakia.

in autumn 2015, raphael, who was two by then, started his first course of treatment. at the time, he could not stand, walk or sit. the initial breakthrou­gh came as raphael began sitting on his own. this was a huge breakthrou­gh.

during his second stay at the medical centre, he was able to hold objects and stand up. “raphael wasn’t the same boy after the treatment. he started walking by himself by hanging onto the furniture,” his mother recalls. to encourage further progress, botulinumt­oxin was administer­ed to

Raphael wasn’t the same boy after the treatment. He started walking by himself by hanging onto the furniture.” Daniela Heer, mother

raphael three weeks before his third stay. this enabled him to extend his leg and stand with his foot flat on the ground.

the most recent developmen­t came when raphael took his first steps in the medical centre’s space suit. his parents said: “this progress confirms we were right to bring him here. in germany, the intensive support was missing because of the lack of time and vision on the system’s part; there are no comparable treatments. the “cosmonaut syndrome”, akin to the well-known “bed rest syndrome”, results in motor disorders, muscle loss, osteoporos­is, and neurologic­al deficits. it occurs in astronauts from exposure to zero gravity and lack of movement in space stations. this phenomenon arises in people with spastic disorders and other physical disabiliti­es because their musculoske­letal system is hardly used.

in a therapeuti­c context, the training at adeli in simulated hyperand hypo-gravity activates the so-called anti-gravitatio­n system. in healthy people, this regulates the movement process under normal gravitatio­nal force. patients learn to sit, stand and walk independen­tly from the stimulatio­n of the propriocep­tive system.

saman@khaleejtim­es.com

 ?? Supplied photos ?? Raphael as an infant, after he was paralysed (left) and while undergoing therapy. —
Supplied photos Raphael as an infant, after he was paralysed (left) and while undergoing therapy. —
 ??  ?? A healthy and mobile Raphael today after he took his first steps. What happens at this centre
A healthy and mobile Raphael today after he took his first steps. What happens at this centre
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