Moving moment after amputation drama: suffering Kostomarov is back on the ice

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Roman Kostomarov defies his fate.

At the beginning of this year, Roman Kostomarow (46) fought for his life for weeks. The 2006 Olympic ice dancing champion developed pneumonia as a result of a corona infection. This led to blood poisoning and tissue death.

To save Kostomarov, doctors amputated his feet, right hand and parts of his left hand. And yet things didn’t go well at first. On the contrary. This was followed by several brain hemorrhages, brain swelling and two strokes. The doctors put the former top athlete into an artificial coma.

More about the Kostomarov drama
Amputation drama involving Olympic figure skating champion
Lost both feet
Amputation drama involving Olympic figure skating champion
Olympic champion loses both feet and hands
Drama about Russian ice dancers
Olympic champion loses both feet and hands
Now Kostomarov also suffered a brain haemorrhage
Amputation drama about Russian
Now Kostomarov also suffered a brain haemorrhage
Olympic figure skating champion wakes up from coma
He was already dying
Olympic figure skating champion wakes up from coma
Olympic figure skating champion learns to eat again
After an induced coma
Olympic figure skating champion learns to eat again
Olympic figure skating champion speaks out for the first time after amputation drama
“Back from the other world”
Olympic champion speaks out for the first time after amputation drama

“The amputation was the beginning of the end,” his treating doctor told woman.ru at the time. “He had a complete system failure. Unfortunately, a natural process is now taking place. The body dies slowly.”

But miraculously Kostomarov survived. He woke up from his coma in mid-March. Despite the difficult fate, the Russian does not give up, he fights his way back to life step by step. When he emerged from the coma, he had to relearn things like chewing and eating and initially needed support when sitting.

Start exercising again

Shortly before Christmas he experiences the next miracle. “I was on the ice!” Kostomarov writes on Instagram in a video of him sliding across the ice for the first time since his fight for survival, still a little wobbly, but with a big grin on his face. This sport still means a lot to him 17 years after his retirement.

He shares the touching moment with his parents – and a camera team. This accompanies him on his path to life, Kostomarov reveals. The resulting documentary will premiere on March 8, about a year after he woke from his coma.

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The progress Kostomarov has made in recent months is impressive. Not only did he learn to walk on his prosthetics, he also recently played tennis with Russian number 15 in the world, Karen Khachanow (27). And he did not let the fact that he could not hold the bat with the prosthesis, but had to strap it to it, stop him. (beer)

Kostomarov shows prosthetics: Olympic champion is training again after leg amputation(00:58)
The Gold Run 2006 in Turin: Kostomarov and Nawka dance in ecstasy(02:27)

Source : Blick

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Emma

Emma

I'm Emma Jack, a news website author at 24 News Reporters. I have been in the industry for over five years and it has been an incredible journey so far. I specialize in sports reporting and am highly knowledgeable about the latest trends and developments in this field.

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