Posted on 12/03/2005 12:58:28 PM PST by wagglebee
A jump into a swimming pool in 2003 changed Travis Robinson's life forever.
Somewhere between a belly flop and a tuck, Robinson, then 17, hit the pool in such a way that he injured his spinal cord. He now is paralyzed from the neck down.
But in January, he hopes another moment will change his life: surgery.
Robinson will fly to Portugal to get a breakthrough surgery at the Hospital Egas Moniz. In the procedure, the scar tissue that surrounds his spinal cord will be removed. Doctors will take tissue that contains stem cells from his sinuses and implant it where the scar tissue was removed.
Robinson will stay in Portugal for two weeks before flying back to Oregon to finish his recovery.
Then, the rehabilitation begins at Project Walk in Carlsbad, Calif. Robinson will receive intensive therapy three to five hours per day, three days per week. For as long as it takes.
"It just depends on how long we can keep enough money to do it, and as long as I keep improving," Robinson said.
The second-year student at Western Oregon University plans to take a sabbatical during the winter semester and possibly longer to work on his rehabilitation.
Project Walk, Robinson said, offers a different kind of therapy. "Not rehab in the sense of getting along with your life and being handicapped, but trying to get back where you were."
Right now, though, the family is focused on getting everything ready for surgery and raising the estimated $90,000 cost for surgery and rehabilitation.
Robinson's mother, Ann Carr, lives in Independence and works in Salem. She is using a Web site based in Salem, helptraviswalk.org, to help raise money for the recovery.
Robinson's father, John "Jocko" Robinson, is a diver in Westchester, Calif. His shop, Dive N' Surf, has been a key part of the family's fundraising effort. He is using a California-based Web site, helptravis.org, to raise money. The sites are identical. More than $94,000 has been raised.
The family also sells bright, royal-blue "Inspire Hope, Help Travis" bracelets, which cost $5.
Robinson's rehabilitation process that could take as long as two years.
"Ultimately, if everything went perfectly, I would gain everything back. But even if I got full use of my hands back, it would completely change my life," he said.
Some of the Portuguese patients who have undergone the surgery have been able to move their legs or walk with a walker. Several others have regained bladder control.
"Whatever he gets back will give him so much more freedom," Carr said.
Stem-cell research is a politically charged issue and has been linked to the abortion debate. Some researchers elsewhere are using stem cells from frozen embryos, but a U.S. policy established by the White House has limited that research to existing stem-cell lines.
Robinson said he has dealt with misconceptions about the kind of surgery he is scheduled.
"Not all stem cells come from an aborted fetus," he said.
Robinson said he is hopeful of the outcome.
"I just don't think people understand how life gets so complicated after something like this," he said. "It's not just difficult for me, but my entire family."
The nose knows
http://www.google.com/scholar?q=olfactory+ensheathing+cells+transplantation&hl=en&hs=JLg&lr=&client=firefox-a&rls=org.mozilla:en-US:official&sa=N&tab=ss&oi=scholart&q=olfactory+ensheathing+cells+transplantation
The future for the amelioration of spinal injury?
Laws can be changed, and hopefully they will be changed when people find out the stem cells can be harvested from the nose!
Unfortunately, it will likely have no effect on thse liberals. You see, they don't care about helping people or about accurate science, just about their control-freak, authoritarian political agenda.
John "Jocko" Robinson, is a diver in Westchester, Calif
That is AMAZING. May God bless those doctors and researchers who have developed this procedure. And may God profoundly bless Travis.
Simply AMAZING.
This young man is going to need all the strength he can get; regaining sensation in atrophied limbs is excruciatingly painful, I understand. The rehabilitation is grueling as well. But, it will be well worth this price, to regain some measure of independence.
Amen, brother!
bfl! thank you
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