Wednesday, January 28, 2009

Women with MS Overcomes Adversity!


Here is a story by The Today Show, Meredith Vierira interviews Jonna Patton who is overcoming the limiting effects of Multiple Sclerosis with the Help of loved ones and a new electronic device by Bioness called the NessL300. Meredith talks to Jonna, husband Tom and Dr. Michael O'Dell.

Prosthetic Center of Excellence is the only Las Vegas O&P Company that is contracted with Bioness to evaluate and fit patients with this NessL300. Should you have any questions regarding this amazing technology and would like to set an appointment for evaluation. Call us at our office 702-384-1410 or email your interests or questions to lvbionics@gmail.com

Monday, January 19, 2009

One-armed shark attack girl runner up in world surfing championship


A girl who had her arm bitten off by a shark while surfing has only narrowly lost out on winning the Association of Surfing Professionals (ASP) World Junior Women's Surfing Championships.

By Stephen Adams
Last Updated: 11:41AM GMT 12 Jan 2009

Hamilton said of surfing minus one arm: 'I've adapted now and got used to it. It's been five years now so it feels natural.' Photo: REUTERS
Hawaiian Bethany Hamilton was 13 when she was attacked by a 15-foot Tiger shark five years ago.

But the talented youngster refused to quit the sport she loved - despite only being left with one arm to paddle with.

She has overcome her disability to become runner-up in the Association of Surfing Professionals (ASP) World Junior Women's Surfing Championships.

At one point the 18-year-old was in the winning position during the Billabong Pro contest, which was held at Narrabeen in Australia, one of Sydney's best-known surfing beaches.

France's Pauline Ado only pipped her to the title by a narrow margin, but Hamilton was the crowd's favourite for the title.

Before the 18-woman contest she told how she would "love to do well" in the contest, her first attempt to win the junior title.

She said of surfing minus one arm: "I've adapted now and got used to it. It's been five years now so it feels natural."

Despite the success, winning the junior title is just a stepping stone to greater things.

She wants to go on to compete in the main women's ASP tour, which consists of a series of events held throughout the year at the best surfing spots around the globe.

She missed out on a place on the 2009 tour by just two places and is now aiming for a place in 2010.

Gary Dunne of surfing company Rip Curl, who sponsors Hamilton, described her as "an inspiration".

He told the Sydney Daily Telegraph: "The reality is losing her arm has made it much more difficult to catch waves but she has learned how to overcome that and is now up there with the best. She has found a way around it.

"The fact she is able to compete and be in the top 20 in the world is phenomenal."

The company was already sponsoring Hamilton when she was attacked: at the time she was considered to be one of the brightest hopes in women's surfing.

Dunne said that she went surfing just three weeks after the attack. He said: "A shark attack is everyone's worst nightmare but she is just someone who loves surfing."

Worlds Fastest Three Legged Man!



Watch Josh Sundquist, a leg amputee, Paralympic athlete, writer and ... as you are about to see - very professional motivational speaker.

Monday, January 12, 2009

Amity man builds knee for amputee athletes



by Matthew Preusch, The Oregonian
Friday January 09, 2009, 9:37 PM

After Cpl. Garrett Jones lost a leg in Iraq in 2007, he told his doctors he hoped to do two things: have a family and snowboard.

A family should be no problem, they told him. The prospects for an above-the-knee amputee to snowboard, however, were nearly nonexistent.

But two years later, Jones is spinning 360s and boosting big airs at Timberline Ski Area, thanks to an Oregon entrepreneur's perseverance and a unique prosthetic knee. With the XT9, amputees can take part in sports such as snowboarding, wakeboarding and telemark skiing.

Seeing Jones blast down the slopes just might change your idea of what's possible for an above-the-knee amputee.

"If I had my pant leg down, you wouldn't know I was an amputee," said Jones, 23, of Newberg, who made some runs at Timberline this week.

The brain behind the XT9 is Jarem Frye of Amity, a hero among many amputees and prosthetics experts. An amputee himself -- he lost a leg to bone cancer at age 14 while growing up in Utah -- Frye, now 30, spent years struggling on the slopes and tinkering in machine shops to develop the knee.

Symbiotechs USA

• What: Amity company that makes the XT9 Energy Storing Prosthetic Knee, its only product

• Employees: Owners Jarem and Sara Frye, plus an assistant

• Profitability: Jarem Frye says Symbiotechs has been profitable since 2006, the year it was founded

• The XT9: The knee, retailing for $7,000 to $9,000, is assembled in Amity from parts made in machine shops in Oregon, California, Utah and Montana. It enables above-the-knee amputees, for the first time, to participate in extreme sports.

• Quote: "Without that knee I wouldn't be able to ski, I wouldn't be able to snowboard, I wouldn't be able to wakeboard. It's mandatory equipment." -- E.J. Poplawski, professional skier who lost his leg in 2006

"At the time I lost my leg, I was really interested in snowboarding," he said, "but I was told there was no way to do that with the amputation."

He learned to "three-track" ski -- on one leg and a pair of crutches fitted with short skis -- and went on to compete at a national level in adaptive ski racing.

Then in 1996, when he was 18, he watched from a ski lift as a telemark skier made graceful turns down the slope below. Tele skiers, who use bindings that keep their heels free, turn by bending their inside knee.

"Without even thinking about it, I said, 'I'd like to try that someday,'" he said. "The other people on the lift looked at me like I was crazy."

Working as a lift operator at Utah's Park City Mountain Resort, he spent $40 for used tele gear, including leather boots with Rollerblade parts. He strapped in his standard prosthetic leg.

"The first time out, my leg fell off," he said. Duct tape fixed that. The larger problem was his walking leg didn't return resistance when he tried to bend his knee to drop into a turn. "That's when I started realizing I was going to have to come up with a device."

He tried to modify his prosthetic leg with an automotive valve from a wrecking yard. Still not enough. Then he fitted a mountain-bike RockShox shock absorber into an old walking knee. With help from a machining student at Brigham Young University, he developed a prototype in 2000 that enabled him to turn as if he had two legs.

Over the next several years, he tried it out on sports such as wakeboarding, snowboarding and rock climbing. Friends and onlookers told him he should market his creation.

He sold a few by word of mouth. Then in 2006, he and his wife moved to Oregon for jobs that quickly fell through. They launched Symbiotechs USA and began selling the XT9 full time. The company sold 30 in 2006 and, Frye said, has sold 120 more since then.

The knee replicates the role of thigh muscles, said James Liston, a prosthetist at Hanger Prosthetics and Orthotics in Salt Lake City. A traditional "walking leg" prosthesis relies on the user to swing it forward with their hip before taking a step. But it can't push back if the user wants to "bend" that leg.

The XTP, in contrast, "resists bending and it actually stores energy and pushes back," Liston said.

The knee is designed for certain sports, so it isn't suitable for everyday use. Frye compares it to walking in a ski boot.

"We don't need to fit every above-the-knee amputee with one, but if there are people who want to do these activities, it's just huge fun," Liston said. "It's so exciting for me, because I've been doing this for 20 years. And things that I thought were impossible I've seen happen."

And the potential market? While many leg amputees have diabetes and probably aren't interested in extreme sports, the National Center for Health Statistics tallied 22,000 above-the-knee leg amputations in 2006, the latest year for which statistics are available.

For people such as Jones, the snowboarding Marine, being able to spend time on Mount Hood is as important as walking.

"It's not the same. It'll never be the same," Jones said. "But snowboarding is my passion, so it doesn't matter. I'm still snowboarding."

Jones returned to Oregon in October from a combat deployment doing intelligence work in Afghanistan. He plans to retire from the Marines in May.

Then he'd like to spend the summer wakeboarding with his XT9 and working on his tricks at Timberline in preparation for adaptive snowboarding competitions.

"I'm fortunate," he said. "That's how I look at it."

-- Matthew Preusch: preusch@bendbroadband.com

Snowboarding amputee










Tuesday, January 6, 2009

Combating cancer on the slopes (with video)

Ski therapy » Outing helps young victims get past disease.
By Mike Gorrell

The Salt Lake Tribune

Updated: 01/06/2009 10:33:12 AM MSTPark City » Not quite three months after her cancerous left leg was amputated just below the hip, Amanda McDaniel watched Paralympian Monte Meier carve fluid one-legged turns Monday at Park City Mountain Resort.



"That will be you before long," said one of McDaniel's instructors from the National Ability Center.

The high school junior responded with a dubious "Oh, yeah" grin. But then she pushed off with her right leg, maintaining balance with the curved outriggers on the ends of her poles as she followed Meier down the slope.

"You've got it," encouraged her primary instructor, Tracy Riddleberger-Meier (Monte's wife), as the group headed back to First Time chairlift for another run.

McDaniel is one of 13 young cancer patients participating in a "Rehabilitation Ski Trip" conducted annually since 1982 by the Children's Cancer Hospital at The University of Texas's M.D. Anderson Cancer Center.

Many have lost limbs to cancer.

None have lost their zest for life.

"They don't whine," said instructor Vince Barbisan, who was teaching Felipe Olivarez, 21, of Houston, the fine points of sit-skiing.

After bone cancer cost Olivarez his left arm and accentuated other health problems, his physical activity had been reduced to playing video games. But although he has spent little time on snow, this trip has inspired him.

"Skiing is a lot different than anything I'd experienced. It's kind of difficult, but I'm getting the hang of it," he said. "I'm more confident. Next year I'll get a little better."

The chance to instill that kind of outlook prompted pediatric oncologist Norman Jaffee to initiate the trip after he saw how much skiing had done for one of his early patients, Ted Kennedy Jr., who lost a leg to cancer in 1973.

"If it was good enough for Ted Kennedy, it was good enough for my other cancer patients," said Jaffee, who initially took patients to Winter Park, Colo., but switched to Park City because he was impressed by National Ability Center founder Meeche White's commitment to helping people with disabilities.

Besides five days of skiing, the cancer kids have a dance. They have an off day to shop in Park City and, importantly, spend time with peers who are going through what they are going through -- and with older people who have survived cancer and thrived.

"All the people you meet are amazing," said McDaniel, a cheerleader looking forward to using her new prosthetic leg when she returns home to Columbia, Mo. "We've gone through similar but different things. It's nice to talk it out."

She has become friends with Amy Jensen, 18, of Estherville, Iowa, who ran track and cross country before a leg was amputated in July of 2007. Nicknamed "Awesome Amy" by her instructors, her goal is to run the Boston Marathon.

"I never thought I'd be able to ski," she said Monday, her third day on the slopes. "My first day I was scared. My mental was bad. But now I think it's fun."

Beginners like Jensen are continually encouraged by people like Shelby Robin, 21, of Austin, now on her ninth ski trip. "To see their progress is really cool," said the fast-skiing Robin, a big Jupiter Bowl fan whose experience beating cancer motivated her to begin nursing school next week.

Watching Robin progress has been inspirational for Jackie Fehr, her instructor the past half dozen years.

"Once they're on the hill, they forget they're disabled, that there's a problem. After they learn that, they can do anything."

mikeg@sltrib.com