UCSF Prosthetic Patient Summits Mount Everest
Nawang Sherpa, who last May became the first man with a prosthetic leg to summit Mount Everest, delivered hope to patients at UCSF recently.
Sherpa, flanked by two friends and fellow mountain climbers, told a tale of courage and conviction on March 25 as a guest of the UCSF Department of Orthopaedic Surgery. The department hosted a reception for Sherpa - one of its most prominent successes - inviting fellow amputees and their families to hear his story and
view the video (Windows Media) chronicling his remarkable trek.
Sherpa, who lost his left leg below the knee when a bus collided with his motorcycle in Kathmandu, Nepal in 2000, reached the peak of the 29,035-foot Mount Everest with a state-of-the-art titanium and carbon-fiber limb just four years later. In doing so, he joined the league of some 1,400 climbers worldwide - and among only a few who are disabled -- to summit the earth's highest mountain.
"He was just amazing," said his friend Tom McMillan, who raced ahead of Sherpa during the momentous May 16, 2004 climb to document the final stretch. "No one with a disability as severe as his has ever done anything like this."
McMillan and Sherpa are members of the Friendship Beyond Borders Expedition, which is using last year's successful Everest climb as a springboard for pursuing new opportunities to raise global awareness of disabled athletes and to "demonstrate the power of international friendships to overcome the world's toughest challenges." As they did at UCSF on Good Friday, they deliver an upbeat message on speaking tours, in short films and on the Internet, where the video of their climb is posted.
Boyhood Dream
A native of the Solukhumbu village of Tapting, Sherpa had always dreamed of climbing Mount Everest since he was a child. He had trained in mountain climbing and had completed part of his work to become a certified high-altitude guide before his tragic accident.
"I was riding my motorcycle when a bus hit me," Sherpa recalled. "There was a lot of bleeding and I got really thirsty. I had to have a Coke."
With the help of a friend, Sherpa hailed a taxi and was stuck in traffic for half an hour before arriving at a local hospital. He was transferred a few days later to another hospital better equipped to care for his battered leg.
"I was in one of the best hospitals for the type of injury I had," Sherpa said. "The doctor tried to save it, but it was very bad."
Final steps to summit of Mount Everest (29,035 ft.; 8,848 meters) looking back at the south face of Lhotse and the Khumbu Region of Nepal, morning of May 16, 2004. |
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