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It doesn't matter whether your hip's shattered by friendly fire or the real thing," says Derrick Goodrich. "You still can't walk." Goodrich, 23, joined the Army from his home in Gillette, Wyo., carrying on a family tradition. But last April, two weeks into his tour in Iraq near the Syrian border, the young man was struck by a bullet from close range-an accidental discharge from a gun behind him. |
Goodrich
didn't know then -- they'd told him shock kept him from moving his leg --
but the impact had vaporized five inches of his sciatic nerve. It was stateside,
at Walter Reed, that he learned the extent of his injury. Saving his leg
looked hopeless. "They told me amputation and a prosthesis would make it
easier for me to get around," he says. But Goodrich pressed his physicians
to seek a second opinion.
And so it was that last November, Hopkins neurosurgeon Allan Belzberg,
M.D., tried a gutsy approach to restoring sciatic nerve function. "This
hadn't been tried here before," says Belzberg. "Even I thought it a little
bold. Going near the spinal cord puts bladder and bowel function at risk.
But Derrick had a chance. And I ran it by colleagues at several institutions.
They said, Go for it."
The largest nerve in the body, the sciatic originates from lumbar and sacral
spinal nerve offshoots that meet in one nerve sheath deep in the pelvis.
"The pelvis is difficult real estate," says Belzberg -- a tough area to
expose.
At first, Belzberg thought the nerve damage might be well away from where
spinal nerves exit the pelvis. Then he could clip out the injured bit and
join the cut ends by grafting a "filler" -- the sensory sural nerve -- harvested
from Goodrich's lower leg. "We hoped Derrick's Army docs might have missed
an uninjured part of the nerve close to the pelvis. So we traced every inch
of it backward, beginning mid-thigh. Basically, we had to pull open the
buttocks, which in itself is difficult. You'll damage the muscles if they're
not split exactly right."
But a clean proximal end of the sciatic nerve didn't exist. "It started
looking ratty as it entered the pelvis," says Belzberg. "And nerve grafts
within the pelvis really don't work well." So he decided to bypass the nerve's
natural pelvic route altogether, instead connecting the sural nerve graft
directly to spinal nerves as they exit the spine at one end, and to the
uninjured part of the sciatic nerve at the other.
A laminectomy freed the spinal cord from surrounding vertebral bone, giving
access to the spinal nerves. Belzberg isolated the appropriate ones to join
to the graft. He then threaded the sural nerve under Goodrich's skin and
muscle, attaching the nerve ends with a microscope's help and the neural
equivalent of super glue -- an eight-hour surgery. Then they waited.
"It was gradual, hard to notice, but a few months later, I bumped my shin
against a chair and I could feel it," says Goodrich, obviously pleased.
Now movement's returned to his hamstrings. He can stand and bend his leg.
"It's too early to know what he'll regain below the knee," says Belzberg,
"but things look very promising. Derrick's told me he's keen to tell the
world that many nerve injuries can be repaired. He says, 'Tell them to stop
cutting peoples' legs off!'"
For information,
call 410-614-9923. |