Top News
Next Story
Newszop

Man's 'life ended' after keyhole surgery went 'catastrophically wrong'

Send Push

A man said a minor surgery that went "catastrophically wrong" resulted in his life being "taken from him."

Steve Logan, 46, said he "died twice" on the operating table and that he would need to learn how to work after a disastrous keyhole surgery went wrong. Mr Logan, who moved to in 2016 in order to live closer to his family out there, shared his horrible experience.

He told affiliate the: "Everything that could go wrong with the surgery did go wrong and I was in a coma for a while. When II found out I’d died twice on the table and the severity of the operation to save my life meant I would have to spend time in a wheelchair and learn to walk again. I have PTSD from it.

“Due to the amount of surgery I’ve had to have after I woke up, they said I would most likely never walk properly again. It was life ending for me, it was horrendous. I was 42 years old, newly divorced, freshly single, starting my life again and all of a sudden my life was taken from me.”

READ MORE:

Due to the trauma caused to Mr Logan's body during the operations, he was diagnosed with stage five - end of life - kidney failure two years ago. He now has to have dialysis three times a week just to survive. He said: “I’ve not let this stop me.

“For the majority of my late teenage years I was the diving northern county champion for many years. I went professional for one year in my early twenties and then I retired due to an injury. I'd hurt my back in Sweden, I hit the water funny and hurt my back and decided I’d had enough and wanted to try something new.

“But after finding out about my kidney failure I made the decision that I wasn't only going to learn to walk again, I was also going to go back and have another go at my diving, I wasn’t letting it stop me.

“Five weeks ago when I finally lost enough weight - I’ve lost 35 kilos, you put weight on being in a wheelchair - I finally returned to the diving boards. In four weeks I'm going to compete at the international diving games to raise money for kidney health Australia and awareness of kidney disease.”

Mr Logan said: “It feels absolutely amazing to be back, it's liberating, although there are down days when I'm on dialysis at home, tied to a machine for six hours a day, three days a week. But the feeling of diving from the top board is like Liverpool winning the premiership every time - I’m still a huge Liverpool fan."

Mr Logan wants to create more awareness of kidney disease, he said: "It's called the silent killer because you don't show any symptoms until it's too late, until you need life saving dialysis.

“I want to raise awareness and inspire people to not feel so down. When you think you have nothing left in the tank you have reserves that you never knew you had.”

, chronic kidney disease gets worse over time and can eventually results in them stopping working altogether, although this is not common. It adds many people with the condition can live long lives with it.

Symptoms of chronic kidney disease includes:

  • tiredness
  • swollen ankles, feet or hands
  • shortness of breath
  • feeling sick
  • blood in your pee (urine)

Book an appointment with your GP if you suspect you have chronic kidney disease.

Loving Newspoint? Download the app now