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Iraq War Amputees get New Limbs and New Life
By JENNIFER C. KERR
Associated Press Writer
3/08/04
WASHINGTON — It was dark and drizzly in
Baghdad on Nov. 25, and Army Staff Sgt. Maurice Craft was patrolling
Highway 5 with two other soldiers. A bomb on the side of the road
went off.
“I felt like I was being sucked out
of the vehicle,” Craft said. “The Humvee filled
up with black smoke, and I just started yelling and screaming because
from my waist down went numb.”
Dazed, he looked at his mangled left leg, hanging
lifelessly.
“I actually felt myself dying. I knew I
was dying,'' said the 26-year-old paratrooper from Asbury Park,
N.J. “Then, one of the soldiers grabbed me, and said, ‘You
need to make it. You've got a wife and kids back home. You can't
die here.' ”
Craft made it to the hospital at Baghdad International Airport.
Doctors and nurses donated blood to save his life, but they couldn't
save his leg.
The father of two young girls learned of the amputation
the next morning when he awakened to see his lieutenant, company
commander and first sergeant standing next to his bed. “Will
I ever be able to jump out of an airplane again,” he asked
them, and the men began to cry.
Now, 3 months later, that idea is not so far-fetched.
Craft is among dozens of amputees from the war
sent to Washington's Walter Reed Army Medical Center, which ranks
as a world leader in treating people with lost limbs. Some of the
high-tech prostheses Walter Reed offers its patients could enable
them to run, play sports — perhaps even jump out of airplanes
one day.
“We view these patients as world-class athletes,”
said Col Jonathan Jaffin, commander of the Walter Reed Health Care
System. “Our goal is to restore them to world-class status.”
Walter Reed is the first stop for most of the
casualties from Iraq. Nearly 2,800 have been treated there.
Land mines and roadside bombs proliferate in the
places American troops now find themselves. Modern body armor protects
them from blasts that previously were fatal, but sometimes survival
comes at steep cost — loss of limbs.
Walter Reed is spending more money, and placing
more of an emphasis, on enhancing amputee care. Officials also are
seeking money from Congress to build a separate amputee care center
on the 113-acre campus.
Chuck Scoville, program manager for the Army's
amputee patient care program, said the new building is needed to
help amputees develop the skills required to return to service,
such as learning to navigate uneven terrain.
About 70 amputees from the war in Iraq have been
treated at Walter Reed.
When they arrive, a team of 15 specialists, from
surgeons to psychiatrists, start the rebuilding process. After the
physical wound heals, the next stop for the patient is the prosthesis
laboratory for the delicate process of fitting the new leg or arm.
Cutting-edge computer imaging is used to make
the plastic socket that attaches the new limb to the body. The soldiers
then are fitted with top-of-the-line artificial legs and arms.
The legs, made of graphite and titanium, are battery-powered
prosthetics with built-in microprocessors to improve control of
the swing motion, making it more stable than previous artificial
legs, said Joseph Miller, a clinical and research prosthetist at
the hospital.
One of the newer products — the “C-leg”
— has computerized sensors that can read the strain applied
to the leg 50 times a second, then make superfast adjustments to
the user's stride to allow the leg to adapt quickly to different
walking speeds.
Prosthetic arms have microprocessors, too, with
mycroelectric hands that can open and close with swifter, sharper
movements that help amputees grab and grip as a normal hand would.
The high-tech hands also look much more natural.
Each arm or leg can cost up to $100,000.
Paddy Rossbach, head of the Amputee Coalition
of America, said the modern artificial limbs make the amputees'
difficult transition a little easier.
“The materials used in today's limbs help
you walk better, not just give you something to walk on,”
said Rossbach, whose Knoxville, Tenn.-based organization has counseled
recovering soldiers at Walter Reed.
Craft was fitted with the C-leg a few weeks ago.
He vividly recalls his first steps. Getting up out of his wheelchair
“felt so good,” he said.
But Craft realizes his long journey ahead. “It's
a real challenge. Every day my body is so sore. I don't know how
much I can take. Sometimes I just lay in my bed and cry,”
he said.
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