Man Walks For First Time In 20 Years
Started by
wheelinPEACE
, Mar 17 2009 02:04 AM
13 replies to this topic
#1
Posted 17 March 2009 - 02:04 AM
a man in California who was paralyzed twenty years ago due to a motorcycle accident is now walking. The amazing cure.....he was bitten by a brown recluse spider.
the whole story can be found at cbs13.com i seen a clip about it on cnn and read the story on cbs13.com but neither said if the man was complete or incomplete.
what's everyone's thoughts on this?
the whole story can be found at cbs13.com i seen a clip about it on cnn and read the story on cbs13.com but neither said if the man was complete or incomplete.
what's everyone's thoughts on this?
Life is a "barrel of monkeys"
#5
Posted 17 March 2009 - 04:05 AM
Damn! I've been lucky to never have had a bad spider bite. I had horrifyingly massive spider crawl out from under the dock at a friend's cottage a few inches from my face while I was out there laying on a towel half-asleep in the sun. I started screaming so loud that my friends thought I got attacked by some wild animal. Grabbed the nearest thing laying beside me--a canoe paddle--and whacked it and I swear to god that thing had a hard shell. A friend of mine got bitten by some mystery spider and it seriously almost killed her. She had to take some hardcore antibiotics for a few weeks, her whole foot swelled up like a balloon. Now, watch, hordes of people are going to get all excited over this 'cure' and start seeking out brown recluse spider bites.
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#6
Posted 17 March 2009 - 08:02 AM
A spider made lil' Miss Muffett jump up and run away, too. I have a spider in my bathroom who hides - he must be a recluse. When I find him I'm gonna poke him and do the same if it's a her. Now I'm worrying that I don't have suitable shoes for walking. Damn.
"It's the notion that there is no perfection ~ that this is a broken world and we live with broken hearts and broken lives but still that is no alibi for anything. On the contrary, you have to stand up and say hallelujah under those circumstances. " - Leonard Cohen
#8
Posted 17 March 2009 - 08:12 AM
Hey was the guy's name by chance Peter Parker?
(spider man spider man does what ever a spider can)
Ah crud I just let everyone know how old I am.
(spider man spider man does what ever a spider can)
Ah crud I just let everyone know how old I am.
*Enjoy every sunset, but be grateful for every dawn.*
*Wheelchairs are made of a special ocular magnetic alloy......they're "eyeball magnets".*
*I USE a wheelchair, that does NOT make ME a wheelchair!*
*Wheelchairs are made of a special ocular magnetic alloy......they're "eyeball magnets".*
*I USE a wheelchair, that does NOT make ME a wheelchair!*
#10
Posted 19 March 2009 - 07:36 AM
I have a degree in marine biology and toxicology and can say in all honesty, that I have great trouble believing this... It sounds more like a urban myth or possibly symptomatic of another, underlying condition...The brown recluse venom is a vasoconstrictor, who's bites produce severe dermonecrotic lesions and in some cases, systemic degradation and failure. How a necrotizing toxin such as this, can even begin to have a re-generational effect on a nerve cluster as complex as the spinal cord, is pretty ridiculous. For all of you who are unfamiliar with the end result of a Brown recluse bite, here is a prime example of the effects.
#11
Posted 19 March 2009 - 09:27 AM
Santa Cruz Soul Surfer (LRO), on Mar 19 2009, 01:36 AM, said:
I have a degree in marine biology and toxicology and can say in all honesty, that I have great trouble believing this... It sounds more like a urban myth or possibly symptomatic of another, underlying condition...The brown recluse venom is a vasoconstrictor, who's bites produce severe dermonecrotic lesions and in some cases, systemic degradation and failure. How a necrotizing toxin such as this, can even begin to have a re-generational effect on a nerve cluster as complex as the spinal cord, is pretty ridiculous. For all of you who are unfamiliar with the end result of a Brown recluse bite, here is a prime example of the effects.

OUCH!! You found a nasty one! My brother got bitten a few yrs ago, but wasn't quite that bad as I remember. Thanks for the words I had to look up in the dictionary. lol. j/k
#12
Posted 20 March 2009 - 04:35 PM
Bit more info on this case.
TERRE HAUTE — A fear of spiders doesn’t seem so irrational after talking with Farris Shahadey.
Bitten on the right ankle by a brown recluse spider in August 2004, Shahadey’s battle with the ensuing illness brought a victory Tuesday with a new prosthetic leg.
“I just got it yesterday,” he said Wednesday afternoon, sitting on a couch in his living room. “I’ve been on this couch for four years,” he said, noting that he can finally stand and walk now with some assistance, something he’s been unable to do since 2004.
“It affected my whole life. I contemplated suicide,” the 55-year-old husband and father of three said.
The brown recluse, also known as a fiddleback spider, has a distinctive violin-shaped marking on its back and belongs to the Sicariidae family of arachnids.
Living in wood sheds and closets from the southern Midwest to the Mexican border, the spider’s poisonous bite can result in extreme damage, as Shahadey can attest.
“I didn’t even know I’d got bit at first,” he said.
The proprietor of Farris Fence Co. for 30 years was used to working outside and getting bitten by the various bugs and insects dwelling in fence rows and lawns. But he remembers the day he was bitten by the brown recluse; afterward, he became physically ill and had to go inside.
It wasn’t until later that he noticed a small brown spot the size of a penny on his ankle. Within two days it grew to the size of a tennis ball and began to look rotten.
Doctors immediately diagnosed the spider’s bite and began what would become more than four years of cutting on Shahadey.
The first attempts to cut the poison out left an unhealing, gaping hole in his leg so deep that his Achilles tendon, muscles and bone were exposed, he said, noting, “that’s when the pain started.”
The poison apparently never left his system, and the resulting circulation problems made his leg feel “on fire 24/7,” he said.
Shahadey marched through four to five Vicodin a day all the way up to OxyContin and “every pain medication known to man” as the lack of blood flow burned at his nerves.
At one point he tried to get up and fell, breaking some ribs and further damaging the leg irreparably, which he said is why the eventual amputation went up above the knee.
“It just killed the leg,” his wife, Dawn, said, noting the circulation in his leg was so bad that gangrene had taken over and eventually could have killed him.
Both Shahadey’s gall bladder and appendix were removed and a heart stent had to be placed before he finally asked for and received the amputation about four years later, on Sept. 25, 2008.
But it hadn’t been without a fight.
The doctors and staff of Terre Haute Regional Hospital’s Center for Wound Care tried “every treatment known to man,” said Dawn, recalling the variety of efforts made to save life and limb.
“There’s nothing like them,” Shahadey said. “They treated me like a human being.”
But in the end, the leg was too far gone to save and the poison was working its way up the body.
“After the amputation, his vitals came right up,” Dawn said. “Who would think you’d get bit by something that would change your life?”
To this day, the leg which carried him more than half a century still seems to be there from time to time.
“It’s all in my brain,” Shahadey said, describing “phantom pain” and the strange sensation of wiggling toes and flexing a calf muscle that aren’t there any more. “It’s still weird to me because I can’t feel it,” he said of the prosthetic.
But as unbearable as the physical pain was, the emotional depression was worse, he said.
Self-employed and accustomed to a life of manual labor outdoors, he was forced onto Social Security disability and his weight fell to 110 pounds from 150.
At one point, he was so weak, he couldn’t lift a gallon of milk.
“Without her, I’d never have been able to succeed,” Shahadey said of his wife, referring to her as “an angel.”
Family, friends and the community of St. George Orthodox Church also were by their side, with Father David Moretti coming to the hospital regularly.
“Father David’s been really unbelievable,” Dawn said. “He’s been an inspiration.”
Now, Shahadey’s looking forward to playing ball with his kids, ages 12, 14 and 20. He’s weighing in at 135 pounds, without the 10-pound prosthetic limb, which soon will be replaced by a permanent one.
Taking physical therapy three times a week, doctors expect he’ll be able to walk without a walker within six months to a year.
“After four years of sitting on this couch, it’s just unbelievable,” he said.
Update!
Peter Parker he's not.
A Northern California paraplegic, who recently regained the ability to walk after being bitten by a poisonous spider, has been arrested, it was reported this week.
David Blancarte, of Modesto, Calif., had been paralyzed 21 years ago in a motorcycle accident.
Then two years ago, after being bitten by a brown recluse spider he started feeling sensations again in his legs and spent eight months in physical therapy before being able to walk.
But on Friday, Manteca Police arrested Blancarte on charges of contempt of court charge stemming from a domestic violence case, CBS News reported.
TERRE HAUTE — A fear of spiders doesn’t seem so irrational after talking with Farris Shahadey.
Bitten on the right ankle by a brown recluse spider in August 2004, Shahadey’s battle with the ensuing illness brought a victory Tuesday with a new prosthetic leg.
“I just got it yesterday,” he said Wednesday afternoon, sitting on a couch in his living room. “I’ve been on this couch for four years,” he said, noting that he can finally stand and walk now with some assistance, something he’s been unable to do since 2004.
“It affected my whole life. I contemplated suicide,” the 55-year-old husband and father of three said.
The brown recluse, also known as a fiddleback spider, has a distinctive violin-shaped marking on its back and belongs to the Sicariidae family of arachnids.
Living in wood sheds and closets from the southern Midwest to the Mexican border, the spider’s poisonous bite can result in extreme damage, as Shahadey can attest.
“I didn’t even know I’d got bit at first,” he said.
The proprietor of Farris Fence Co. for 30 years was used to working outside and getting bitten by the various bugs and insects dwelling in fence rows and lawns. But he remembers the day he was bitten by the brown recluse; afterward, he became physically ill and had to go inside.
It wasn’t until later that he noticed a small brown spot the size of a penny on his ankle. Within two days it grew to the size of a tennis ball and began to look rotten.
Doctors immediately diagnosed the spider’s bite and began what would become more than four years of cutting on Shahadey.
The first attempts to cut the poison out left an unhealing, gaping hole in his leg so deep that his Achilles tendon, muscles and bone were exposed, he said, noting, “that’s when the pain started.”
The poison apparently never left his system, and the resulting circulation problems made his leg feel “on fire 24/7,” he said.
Shahadey marched through four to five Vicodin a day all the way up to OxyContin and “every pain medication known to man” as the lack of blood flow burned at his nerves.
At one point he tried to get up and fell, breaking some ribs and further damaging the leg irreparably, which he said is why the eventual amputation went up above the knee.
“It just killed the leg,” his wife, Dawn, said, noting the circulation in his leg was so bad that gangrene had taken over and eventually could have killed him.
Both Shahadey’s gall bladder and appendix were removed and a heart stent had to be placed before he finally asked for and received the amputation about four years later, on Sept. 25, 2008.
But it hadn’t been without a fight.
The doctors and staff of Terre Haute Regional Hospital’s Center for Wound Care tried “every treatment known to man,” said Dawn, recalling the variety of efforts made to save life and limb.
“There’s nothing like them,” Shahadey said. “They treated me like a human being.”
But in the end, the leg was too far gone to save and the poison was working its way up the body.
“After the amputation, his vitals came right up,” Dawn said. “Who would think you’d get bit by something that would change your life?”
To this day, the leg which carried him more than half a century still seems to be there from time to time.
“It’s all in my brain,” Shahadey said, describing “phantom pain” and the strange sensation of wiggling toes and flexing a calf muscle that aren’t there any more. “It’s still weird to me because I can’t feel it,” he said of the prosthetic.
But as unbearable as the physical pain was, the emotional depression was worse, he said.
Self-employed and accustomed to a life of manual labor outdoors, he was forced onto Social Security disability and his weight fell to 110 pounds from 150.
At one point, he was so weak, he couldn’t lift a gallon of milk.
“Without her, I’d never have been able to succeed,” Shahadey said of his wife, referring to her as “an angel.”
Family, friends and the community of St. George Orthodox Church also were by their side, with Father David Moretti coming to the hospital regularly.
“Father David’s been really unbelievable,” Dawn said. “He’s been an inspiration.”
Now, Shahadey’s looking forward to playing ball with his kids, ages 12, 14 and 20. He’s weighing in at 135 pounds, without the 10-pound prosthetic limb, which soon will be replaced by a permanent one.
Taking physical therapy three times a week, doctors expect he’ll be able to walk without a walker within six months to a year.
“After four years of sitting on this couch, it’s just unbelievable,” he said.
Update!
Peter Parker he's not.
A Northern California paraplegic, who recently regained the ability to walk after being bitten by a poisonous spider, has been arrested, it was reported this week.
David Blancarte, of Modesto, Calif., had been paralyzed 21 years ago in a motorcycle accident.
Then two years ago, after being bitten by a brown recluse spider he started feeling sensations again in his legs and spent eight months in physical therapy before being able to walk.
But on Friday, Manteca Police arrested Blancarte on charges of contempt of court charge stemming from a domestic violence case, CBS News reported.
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