Former New Zealand all-rounder Chris Cairns on Sunday took to Twitter and shared a video in which he said the road ahead is long but feels grateful to be here. It was the first time when Cairns had spoken after paralysis in legs due to a stroke in his spine following an emergency heart surgery in Sydney.
The Canberra-based former New Zealand cricketer had an emergency operation in Sydney but suffered a stroke during the procedure, leaving him unable to use his legs.
In a video he posted on Twitter, the 51-year-old, one of the world’s top all-rounders in the early 2000s said that he was grateful to be here although it remains a long, long road ahead. He also thanked the surgeons, doctors, nurses and specialists who looked after him in Canberra and Sydney.
In a first public appearance after surgery, Cairns shared a video message for his fans and well-wishers and said just over six weeks ago, he suffered a type-A aortic dissection, which essentially means there’s a tear in one of the major arteries of the heart. He had several surgeries and grafts and very thankfully the specialists were able to save the heart itself, Cairns said.
Cairns faces a long road to recovery after he suffered an aortic dissection, a major medical event that saw him transferred to Sydney’s St Vincent’s Hospital on life support earlier this month.
Aortic dissection is a serious condition in which a tear happens in the inner layer of the body’s main artery (aorta).
Cairns’ condition was serious but stable on August 11 on transfer to Sydney. Last week, he was off life support and communicating with his family.
Cairns lives with his wife Melanie two young children in Canberra.
However, Cairns’ on-field achievements were overshadowed by match-fixing allegations that led to 2 court cases against him.
He was allegedly accused of match-fixing in India when he was captain of the Chandigarh Lions in the defunct Indian Cricket League (ICL) in 2008. He had fought several legal battles to clear his name.
He was cleared on both occasions but complained his reputation had been scorched regardless.
Cairns, the son of former New Zealand Test cricketer Lance Cairns, featured in 62 Tests, 215 ODIs and two T20Is for New Zealand between 1989 and 2006. In 2000, he was named as one of five Wisden Cricketers of the Year