Lindsey Vonn says she almost lost her leg after Olympics crash
Lindsey Vonn says her left leg almost needed to be amputated following her horrific crash while competing at the Milan-Cortina Olympics earlier this month.
In a video posted to Instagram on Monday, the U.S. ski racing legend said she has been released from the hospital more than two weeks after suffering a complex tibia fracture and other damage that led to compartment syndrome in the leg.
Vonn credited Dr. Tom Hackett, an orthopedic surgeon who works for Vonn and Team USA, for salvaging the limb. She also gave some indirect credit to the complete rupture of the anterior cruciate ligament in her left knee that occurred during another crash on Jan. 30, just a week before the start of the Winter Olympics.
βI always talk about everything happens for a reason,β Vonn said. βIf I hadnβt torn my ACL … Tom wouldnβt have been there. He wouldnβt have been able to save my leg.β
Vonn has won 84 World Cup races and three Olympic medals, including gold in the downhill at the 2010 Vancouver Games. She returned to competitive skiing last year after a six-year hiatus. Vonn did not allow the torn ACL to prevent her from competing in what she has called her βfifth and final Olympics.β
Despite completing multiple test runs, Vonnβs Feb. 8 downhill race lasted 13 seconds before she crashed. She was airlifted from the Olimpia delle Tofane course in Cortina dβAmpezzo, Italy.
In addition to the previously reported complex tibia fracture, Vonn said Monday that she also fractured her fibular head and tibia plateau on her left leg during the crash.
βJust kind of everything was in pieces,β said Vonn, who added that she also broke her right ankle during the accident.
Vonn said that all the trauma in her left leg caused a condition called compartment syndrome, which involves excessive pressure building up inside a muscle, either from bleeding or swelling, and can restrict blood flow and possibly lead to permanent injury.
βWhen you have so much trauma to one area of your body that thereβs too much blood and it gets stuck, and it basically crushes everything in the compartment so all the muscle and nerves and tendons, it all kind of dies,β Vonn said.
βAnd Dr. Tom Hackett saved my leg. He saved my leg from being amputated. He did whatβs called a fasciotomy, where he cut open, like both sides of my leg, and kind of filleted open, so to speak, let it breathe. And he saved me.β
At one point since the crash, Vonn said, she received a blood transfusion to raise her hemoglobin levels.
βI canβt tell you how painful itβs been,β she said.
Vonn still has a long road to recovery. She said sheβs βvery much immobile,β confined to a wheelchair for the time being and then on crutches for at least two months.
βIt will take around a year for all of the bones to heal and then I will decide if I want to take out all the metal or not,β Vonn wrote in the Instagram post, βand then go back into surgery and finally fix my ACL.β
She added in the video: βWe have to take the punches as they come, so Iβll do the best I can with this one. It really knocked me down, but Iβm like Rocky. Iβll just keep getting back up.β
The Associated Press contributed to this report.