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Oakville Beaver, 26 Mar 2010, p. 18

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www.oakvillebeaver.com · OAKVILLE BEAVER Friday, March 26, 2010 · 18 Shock tough to identify Continued from page 13 FAMILY FREE FAMILY PASS! The Oakville CO UP O N CLIP & SAV E! PUT ON YOUR F RID GE! CLIP & SAV E This Pass will allow your family FREE admission (2 adults and 2 children) to the RE EP AR KIN G Oakville Lifestyle Home Show, sunrooms, decks, blinds, April 9, 10 & 11, 2010 air conditions, garage at the Glen Abbey Recreation Centre, doors, countertops, 1415 Third Line just nor th of the Q.E.W. PRESENTED BY: You Will See: Proudly produced by Jenkins Show Productions You Will See: · hundreds of new products & services for your home · terrific, one time Home Show specials · lots of prizes & free draws · a great family outing! · local, reliable companies Regular Admission $3 Children 12 & under FREE ENTER TO WIN One of four 2,000 lb bags of rich gardening soil. Delivered to your driveway courtesy of Green Horizons artwork, awnings, shutters, replacement windows & doors, builders, renovators, deck refinishers, water purifiers, cookware, resorts, landscapers, spas, painters, flooring, plus much more! SHOW HOURS: Friday 11 to 9, Saturday 11 to 5, Sunday 11 to 5 Lin said the only visible sign of being shocked was a black burn and blister on the fourth finger of his right hand. Chris was sent home. Lin says she "didn't think they had ever seen anything like that before." If this incident had happened in the Chicago, Illinois area, however, Chris would have come under the gaze of the University of Chicago Hospital's Electrical Trauma Program, where he would have been subjected to a number of tests. Recognizing that the effects of electrical shock are difficult to identify, are wide ranging and complex, they point out that survivors may be faced with long-term muscular pain and discomfort, fatigue, problems with peripheral nerve conduction and sensation, inadequate balance and co-ordination and other cognitive and psychological problems. As well as being potentially heartstopping, the charge can cook internal organs and muscles and can result in post-traumatic psychiatric disorders, which can be life-changing. Although Chris was now on his own after leaving the Oakville hospital, the effects of the charge were beginning to become apparent to him. That same night, he noticed he had trouble remembering. "I was forgetting things I know I should be aware of," Chris said. By the next morning he did not know where he was, and although he remembered what had taken place, he no longer knew who his teachers at the University of Toronto were and what classes he was taking, not to mention what he had learned in the previous two months. "The last six months felt like a dream, it just slips out of your mind." He was no longer familiar with his girlfriend's parents although he had gotten to know them well over the preceding few months. Events of the last six months seemed to be slipping away, replaced by occasional details. A doctor told him that amnesia after shock was not uncommon, but indicated nothing could be done. Meanwhile, his leg was beginning See Grappling page 19 OB ¡ F

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