Sunday, December 21, 2025
ADVT 
Interesting

Parents Choose To Break Daughter's Leg Three Times A Day For Four Months To Avoid Amputation

Darpan News Desk IANS, 09 May, 2016 12:27 PM
    Parenting is tough at the best of times, but it has been nothing short of harrowing for Jackie and Matt Moravek, from Kalamazoo, Michigan.
     
    The young couple had to make the awful decision to have their four-year-old's leg broken a total of 300 times over four months - that's three times a day - just to save her from amputation.
     
    Little Elsie Moravek was born with a rare disability known as proximal femoral focal deficiency (PFFD), which caused her left leg to be deformed and much shorter than her right leg.
     
    The two treatment options presented to the Moraveks were amputation and prosthesis, but they managed to find a third way that could potentially lengthen Elsie's leg by just over four inches. Sadly, the gruesome procedure involved breaking her leg three times a day for four months.
     
    "A few local doctors suggested amputation, and we considered it because the leg lengthening process is so difficult to endure," said Jackie. "We asked ourselves if we were being cruel to put our daughter through this and whether it was worth it. But we knew it was the right decision. We wanted Elsie to have the best life possible."
     
    It was when Jackie and Matt met Dr Shawn Standard, an expert in leg lengthening at the Sinai Hospital in Baltimore, that they finally decided to go ahead with the procedure. Elsie had her first surgery at 6 months old - a six-hour operation to reconstruct her knee, ankle and hip. She was then fitted with a prosthetic foot that bridged the gap between her real foot and the floor, after which she was able to walk for the first time.
     
    But that was just the beginning of the ordeal. At age three she went through another surgery to surgically split apart her thigh and calf bones. Her leg was fitted with an external fixator device with ten pins piercing through her skin, muscle, and bone. And to prevent the break from healing, Jackie had to manually turn the screws on the device, pulling apart the femur and tibia bones by 0.039 inches a day.
     
     
     
    By doing this, Elsie's body was able to grow new bone, muscle, and skin in the gap and her leg gradually lengthened by four inches over four months. Throughout that time, the little girl was constantly on pain medication to withstand the agonizing treatment. 
     
    "I felt very helpless," Jackie recalled. "I was very pleased with her progress but it was hard to see her in pain and crying. Cleaning the open wounds where the ten pins had been drilled into her bone was the worst. It was agony for her. I felt upset watching her go through it, but we had a goal in mind."
     
    "I would have to put my mum hat on and push through it because I knew what the end result would be," she added. And she was right - Elsie's legs are now even for the first time in her life. But sadly, they will grow out of sync again as she grows older because of the growth deficiency in her left leg. Once she reaches her full height, she will need to go through another round of surgery to lengthen her leg again. As difficult as that sounds, Jackie says that all the pain and effort is worth it to keep Elsie from losing a leg.
     
    "We wanted to give Elsie the best life possible and we thought the best option was to lengthen her leg," she said. "That means she won't need a prosthetic or to get her leg amputated so she can do everything other girls her age are capable of. We made a lot of sacrifices for this but every single one of them was worth it."

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    Mom's Facebook Apology Garners Thousands 'Likes'

    Mom's Facebook Apology Garners Thousands 'Likes'
    Alabama resident Kyesha Smith Wood's apology through a public post on Facebook for her daughter and stepdaughter's bad behaviour at a movie theatre has garnered much appreciation from all quarters.

    Mom's Facebook Apology Garners Thousands 'Likes'

    A Garden's Now More Than A Garden: Trying To Help The Planet (And Look Good Doing It)

    A Garden's Now More Than A Garden: Trying To Help The Planet (And Look Good Doing It)
    From the biggest botanical gardens to the smallest backyard plots and terraces, there's a movement underway to make gardens work harder for the environment.

    A Garden's Now More Than A Garden: Trying To Help The Planet (And Look Good Doing It)

    Getting A Jump On Tomato Season: How To Time Indoor Planting Just Right

    Getting A Jump On Tomato Season: How To Time Indoor Planting Just Right
    Occasional warm, spring-like breezes and longer hours of sunlight kindle an urge in me to plant tomatoes, starting them indoors, of course.

    Getting A Jump On Tomato Season: How To Time Indoor Planting Just Right

    Women Prefer To Click Selfies From Right-hand Side

    Women Prefer To Click Selfies From Right-hand Side
    If your girlfriend insists on clicking her selfie from the right-hand side, then she is not alone. Women ensure that the camera always captures their best side -- and almost half of women say that they will always turn a particular way when confronted with a camera.

    Women Prefer To Click Selfies From Right-hand Side

    Flexible Working Hours Make Workers Happy: Study

    Flexible Working Hours Make Workers Happy: Study
    Allowing workers to choose the slot of hours they want to work in is good for their well-being, says a study from Loughborough University, England.

    Flexible Working Hours Make Workers Happy: Study

    Indians Spend Over 13 Hours Each Week On Cooking: Study

    Indians Spend Over 13 Hours Each Week On Cooking: Study
    People in India and Ukraine spend just over 13 hours a week cooking, compared to the international average of less than six and a half hours each week, a study revealed on Monday.

    Indians Spend Over 13 Hours Each Week On Cooking: Study