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Jones thanks parents & experimental medical procedure for being alive today

A medical technique called a brain bolt helped the 25-year-old in his road to recovery after a serious car crash in northern B.C. in 2016
Ryan Jones outside his aunt's Coquitlam home.

After Ryan Jones fell into a coma following a major car crash in 2016, his mom and dad were presented with a decision no parent wants to make.

Their 22-year-old son’s heart had stopped beating for more than 40 minutes, cutting off his oxygen and causing a traumatic brain injury. However, doctors said they could try a new experimental procedure called a brain bolt they believed could help Ryan’s recovery.

All Donna and Jim had to do was sign a consent form.

“If my parents said no, I wouldn’t be alive,” Jones told The Tri-City News during an interview at his aunt’s Coquitlam home on Friday.

The brain bolt is a monitoring device that was funded through the Vancouver General Hospital and UBC Hospital Foundation. The technology allowed doctors to closely monitor Jones’ brain through specialized catheters, giving the medical team up-to-the-second information, including oxygen levels and blood pressure.

“Immediately after putting in the catheter the team was able to begin healing Ryan’s brain,” said Dr. Myp Sekhon, who along with Dr. Don Griesdale oversaw the recovery.

Within six weeks, Jones woke up. 

Three years later, the 25-year-old is now walking and talking and recently found a job with a construction company in Fort St. John. 

“I’m definitely lucky to be alive,” he said. “All of the stars aligned for me to be alive.”

Jones may have been the first in Canada to receive a brain bolt, but the procedure has proven so effective that he has not been the last. 

In fact, he said one of the reasons why his parents agreed to the treatment was they knew it would provide information that could be used to help others. 

“It’s helping keep more people alive,” he said.

Ryan Jones has no memory of the six months he spent at Vancouver General Hospital following a major car crash outside of Fort St. John in 2016. - SUBMITTED PHOTO

THE CRASH

Jones does not remember much from the day of the accident. 

A wildland firefighter, he was driving to a blaze near Fort St. John when he ran into a late-season snowfall. He had recently swapped out his snow tires and when he hit a slippery patch he veered into the oncoming lane.  

The crash occurred shortly after 6 a.m. By dinnertime, he had been medevaced to VGH. 

While Jones has made astounding progress since his accident, the road to recovery has been long. 

He still has no memory of the six months he spent at Vancouver General Hospital after the crash. He also spent another nine months at GF Strong, where he slowly relearned how to walk and talk.

“Finding words, I couldn’t even find words most of the time,” he said. “Someone would ask me a question. In my head, I would know what I should be saying, but the words, I didn’t know how to describe what to say to the person.”

He recently underwent a 15-month program at the Watson Centre Society for Brain Health in Burnaby, which he said has had a dramatic improvement on his ability to speak. 

Jones also credits his family for having his back and pushing him to keep moving ahead with his recovery.

“That support network has brought me to where I am today,” he said. 

Still, the magnitude of what he has overcome over the last three years is never far from Jones’ mind. 

“My heart had stopped for a total of 40 minutes that day,” he said in amazement. “For someone to have 40 minutes of no heart beating in one day... It’s intense.”

Brain bolt _2
At the GF Strong Rehabilitation Centre, Ryan Jones had to relearn how to walk and talk as he recovered from his accident.

HOMETOWN HEROES LOTTERY

Tickets for the VGH and UBC Hospital Foundation and the British Columbia Professional Firefighters’ Burn Fund Hometown Heroes Lottery are now on sale.

The initiative raises funds for specialized adult health services and research and were crucial to Ryan Jones receiving the experimental brain bolt. 

“These funds purchase life-saving medical equipment at Vancouver General Hospital,” said Barbara Grantham, president and CEO of the VGH and UBC Hospital Foundation. “Each ticket purchase has a direct impact on patients and enables us to be able to put the most advanced medical tools into the hands of our talented medical teams, ensuring that VGH remains at the forefront of specialized care for adults in B.C.”

The winner of the Hometown Heroes Lottery can choose one of nine grand prize packages worth close to $2.6 million. Tickets are on sale until July 11. For information and to order tickets go to heroeslottery.com. 

gmckenna@tricitynews.com

@gmckennaTC