Some
animals getting a second chance at life thanks to
prosthetic limbs
Utusan
Express, 30 May 2003
|

|
|
LINDA Kubiak of
Springport, Mich, walks with her llama Mocha,
who has an artificial right front leg, March 3.
- APpix.
|
WILMINGTON (Ohio) May 29 - Photographs of dogs,
cows, horses, llamas and even a kangaroo blanketed
the examination table, tossed there one-by-one by
Richard Nitsch like he was dealing cards.
Nitsch,
who ticked off the history of each animal like a
proud father, had fitted them all with artificial
limbs. And the photos told the story.
Among
them was Mocha, the llama with her coffee-colored
artificial leg, an almost perfect match of her fur.
There was also Stumpie, the kangaroo, who was fitted
with an artificial foot on her justify leg.
``All of
them are success stories in one way or another,''
said Nitsch, office manager of American Orthopedics,
a Columbus-based company that manufacturers
artificial limbs for people.
Nitsch
and veterinary surgeon David Anderson at Ohio State
University teamed up three years ago to give animal
amputees new lives by replacing lost limbs.
Anderson
was first approached in 1993 about doing surgery on
a cow so it could be fitted with an artificial leg
and continue to breed. After that, he did
artificial-limb operations once every couple of
years.
Nitsch
had 20 years' experience making artificial limbs for
people. When Anderson presented the idea of making
an artificial leg for a rare black alpaca, Nitsch
agreed.
Since
the two have become a team, Anderson has done one or
two artificial-limb operations a year; Nitsch has
made limbs for 14 animals from Ohio, Michigan and
West Virginia.
``I
can't say there is anyone I know that is doing this
routinely,'' Nitsch said.
Mocha,
the 6-year-old llama, broke her right front leg last
spring. Owner Linda Kubiak looked out her living
room window in Springport, Michigan, and noticed
that Mocha was limping. Her leg was dangling. Soon,
she was laying helplessly on the ground.
``In
order for her to eat and drink, I would have to hold
her head,'' Kubiak recalled. ``I finally had to get
a hoist in the barn. Every other day I had to lift
her up to try to strengthen her leg.''
Kubiak
heard about Anderson through a friend and took Mocha
to see him.
Anderson
amputated the leg, and Nitsch fitted her with an
artificial limb.
Mocha
can now run through the woods and even presents her
artificial leg for changing.
``She is
not suffering. She is happy. Mocha's going to have a
long life ahead of her,'' Kubiak said.
Anderson
said owners turn to artificial limbs because of
their attachment to their animals or they want to
preserve them for financial reasons. Llamas are
raised for their fur, and animals that lose a limb
may not be able to breed.
``There's an increasing use of prosthetics,''
Anderson said. ``Animal owners want to maximize the
quality of life for their animals. Owners are no
longer willing to accept there's an artificial limit
to an animal's life.''
Making
and fitting artificial limbs for animals occurs
worldwide, according to Thorofare, New Jersey-based
O&P Business News, a biweekly publication devoted to
orthotics and prosthetics.
Alan
Lipowitz, executive secretary of the American
College of Veterinary Surgeons, said he has heard of
individual instances of animals being equipped with
artificial limbs, but he does not know of anyone who
makes a business of it.
Anderson
said loss of a limb can shorten an animal's life by
increasing the stress on other limbs and the joints.
That can prevent an animal from standing.
Nitsch
makes the custom-fitted plastic and Fiberglas limbs
using the same molding and fitting process he uses
for humans. He first makes a cast of what's justify of
the animal's amputated limb, fills the cast with
plaster and produces a replica of the leg.
The
replica must then be modified - with the plaster
shaved away or filled in - to make sure it bears the
animal's weight in the best way and enables it to
walk with a normal gait. That takes several
fittings, with the process lasting up to a month.
The limb is then secured to the animal with a strap
or hinge.
``The
animal can't tell me it hurts or it's falling off,
so it has to be foolproof,'' Nitsch said. ``The
first few steps they're trying to kick it off. It
takes some animals longer than others to get used to
it.''
Nitsch
makes no profit, charging only for labor and
materials. For most animals, the cost of a new limb
is between $400 and $600. For horses, the range is
$500 to $1,000.
Nitsch
said he may some day make it a business, but for now
will continue to do it out of pure enjoyment.
``I love
what I do. The second thing is I love animals,'' he
said. ``So it kind of fell in line.''
Tammy
Rogers, director of the International Kangaroo
Society, said Nitsch provided a prosthetic for
Stumpie.
Rogers,
who nurses sick and injured kangaroos back to health
at her one-acre (a half hectare) sanctuary in
Lancaster, Ohio, said the 3-year-old animal could
not ``posture,'' a natural observing position for
kangaroos in which they stand on hind legs with
their front paws up in the air.
``She
walked on three feet. She did not hop,'' Rogers
said.
To make
matters worse, Rogers was forced to prevent the
animal from mating because she feared the weight of
carrying the offspring in the pouch would be too
much for the one-footed mother.
Since
receiving an artificial foot from Nitsch, the
kangaroo has been re-energized, has begun to posture
again and will be allowed to breed.
``It
gave her confidence,'' Rogers said. ``You could just
see it in her eyes.''
On the
Net:
Ohio State College of Veterinary Medicine:
http://www.vet.ohio-state.edu/
American College of Veterinary Surgeons:
http://www.acvs.org/
International Kangaroo Society:
http://www.roosociety.org/ - AP |