Daily Times (Primos, PA)

Paralyzed Humboldt crash survivor takes first steps

- By Dan Gelston

The day Ryan Straschnit­zki underwent surgery that would turn his body into something like a remote-controlled robot, the paralyzed hockey player had one deep worry: The 6-foot-1, 190-pound defenseman who once didn’t miss a shift even after dislocatin­g a shoulder told his dad he was afraid of needles.

“I said, ‘Pal, they’re going to open you up. Who cares. Let’s just get this done,’” said his father, Tom Straschnit­zki.

So began the path toward Ryan’s first small steps since he was paralyzed from the chest down 17 months ago in the devastatin­g Humboldt Broncos bus crash in Canada that killed 16 people, including some of his teammates and coaches.

Early last month, Straschnit­zki was wheeled into a Thailand hospital for a four-hour procedure that involved an epidural stimulator — think of it as a spinal pacemaker — being placed in the bottom left side of his back to help bridge the gap between his brain and his nerves.

Now 20, Straschnit­zki has since had three stem cell injections in hopes of reversing the damage from an injury that had saddled him without much prospect of ever leaving his wheelchair

“I went in knowing there had been some good outcomes,” Ryan Straschnit­zki said, “but everybody’s different.”

About two weeks later, the former junior hockey player started to get

With the aid of a device that sends electrical currents remotely to the spinal cord, stimulatin­g both nerves and limbs, Straschnit­zki clutched a gaittraini­ng E-Pacer to take a few simple, halting steps. A therapist nearby guided him to ensure his knees didn’t buckle or his ankles twist.

“The last time he walked when was when he walked onto the bus that day of the accident,” his father said.

Ryan has essentiall­y had results. his body reprogramm­ed, one reason why father and son have spent more than a month in Thailand as doctors map his movements through an iPad, and search for healthy muscles and nerves that could open a path toward walking again.

The procedure was done to strengthen core muscles — the ones around the trunk and pelvis — and allow Straschnit­zki to move more independen­tly.

“It didn’t really feel real,” he said. “I didn’t necessaril­y feel it but it was actually moving. I kind of took into considerat­ion that maybe this isn’t going to be a cure, but it’s the next best thing for me.”

He was paralyzed on April 6, 2018, in one of the worst tragedies in Canadian sports history when an inexperien­ced truck driver blew through a stop sign at a rural intersecti­on in Saskatchew­an and ran directly into the path of the hockey team’s bus. Many survivors have struggled in various ways, their lives forever changed.

The Straschnit­zkis’ hunt for the right medical treatment has stretched from their Alberta home to steamy Bangkok. He spent time at a rehab hospital in Philadelph­ia this spring and went to a spinal cord injury and neurologic­al rehab center in Calgary.

He struck up a relationsh­ip with former surgeon Richi Gill, who was paralyzed after a boogie board accident in Hawaii and had traveled to Thailand to have the same implant placed in his lower back. He suggested Straschnit­zki needed to make the trip to have any hope of improving his core muscles — a key for playing sled hockey — to regain some control of his body.

Some hurdles loomed, namely the $110,000 Canadian it cost to undergo surgery that wasn’t covered by insurance for an operation in Thailand. The Straschnit­zkis had exhausted cash raised via a crowdfundi­ng platform and are still accepting donations through the #strazstron­g campaign to cover the remainder of the bill.

 ?? TOM STRASCHNIT­ZKI — VIA AP ?? This photo provided by Tom Straschnit­zki shows Ryan Straschnit­zki as he plays with an orangutan during a visit to the Safari World zoo in Bangkok, Thailand, Sunday.
TOM STRASCHNIT­ZKI — VIA AP This photo provided by Tom Straschnit­zki shows Ryan Straschnit­zki as he plays with an orangutan during a visit to the Safari World zoo in Bangkok, Thailand, Sunday.

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