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Apayao girl takes first steps in first pair of shoes


Philippine Daily Inquirer
First Posted 02:09:00 07/04/2008

NEW YORK—A Filipino teenager who came to New York so doctors could perform surgery to untwist her severely clubbed feet took her first unaided steps Wednesday in pink-and-white sneakers—the first pair of shoes she’s ever worn.

“I’m very happy,” Jingle Luis said with a smile. “It was exciting.”

“This is a miracle. I am very thankful to God,” said Jingle’s mother, Jasmine Luis, who makes a living back home selling fish door-to-door. Jingle’s father is a corn farmer.

The 15-year-old girl from Luna, Apayao province, in northern Philippines arrived at Montefiore Medical Center in the Bronx in May with her mother for surgery and follow-up treatment.

Jingle’s case came to the attention of Montefiore after a staff physician traveled to her province in 2003 with a Christian relief mission.

Jingle had never been able to walk on her own because she was born with feet so clubbed they twisted backward and upside down, forcing her to hobble on the tops of her feet with the help of crutches.

On Wednesday, doctors took off her post-surgical casts and replaced them with special support braces.

Then came the moment she had waited a lifetime for: She slipped her feet into her first pair of shoes and took several long strides.

The surgery, which the hospital performed for free, involved inserting screws into the bones of her feet and turning them bit by bit to straighten them out.

When the pins were taken out, the feet were straight, but casts were put on for several weeks to keep them that way.

Dr. Terry Amaral, her surgeon, expects Jingle to wear the braces for about a year.

While clubfoot is a relatively common deformity, occurring in about one in 1,000 births, children are usually treated in infancy with casts or braces that gradually bring the feet into correct alignment.

Amaral said Jingle’s condition was complicated by spina bifida, a birth defect that involves the incomplete development of the spinal cord or its coverings.

Doctors who saw Jingle as a baby thought her spina bifida would shorten her life span and prevent her from walking, so they did not treat the clubfoot, Amaral said.

But Jingle’s condition turned out to be relatively mild.

“She’s essentially a normal child,” Amaral said.

Associated Press


Copyright 2008 Philippine Daily Inquirer. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.



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