The inspirational doctor paralyzed from the waist who can still perform surgeries thanks to remarkable stand-up wheelchair
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Tenacious: The tenacious doctor lost his ability to walk when a cyst burst in his spine. A year of grueling rehabilitation later, he was right back in the OR repairing joints and improving lives
Rummel told the Enquirer that his freedom despite his disabilities have been a lifesaver.
‘When I’m able to do this, and I can get a piece of my life back, it’s huge,’ he said. ‘It’s so special.’
But the miraculous outcome wasn’t always a sure thing.
The surgeon’s troubles began in 2009 when he was diagnosed with a cavernous hemangioma, a type of blood-filled sac, on his spine.
Doctors fearful they might cause him immediate paralysis opted not to operate.
He lived with the cyst for 11 months until September 2010, when the sac ruptured and the necessary surgery he underwent thereafter left him numb from the waist down.
Suddenly Rummel, who practices in O’Fallon, Missouri, found himself going from performing 1,000 surgeries per year to not knowing if he’d ever work again.
‘One of my first thoughts was, “Oh my gosh, my life as I know it was erased,”’ he recalls. ‘Who you are out of the OR is gone and you have to redefine yourself.’
But the dedicated physician soon came to his senses and decided he’d be back in the OR no matter what it took.
A year later, that’s exactly what he did. The first surgery he undertook was watched over by another surgeon in case Rummel needed help. But he never did.
‘Very quickly it was apparent that his skills were still there,’ said Ann Abad, of Progress West Healthcare Center, where Rummel works.
Rummel began performing all the procedures he could from a sitting wheelchair: on hands, elbows, feet, ankles, and knees.
But he couldn’t perform he favorite surgery, on shoulders, because it required him to be standing up.
Undeterred, he beat that problem, too.
Paralyzed doctor's impressive return to operating theatre
Loving family: Here, Ted Rummel hugs his wife, Kathy, before going into the operating room. Rummel credits his wife for and family for helping him overcome his disability