China's star hurdler Liu Xiang arrives at Los Angeles
International Airport in the United States to transfer flight to Houston on
December 3.- Xinhua
Star hurdler Liu Xiang is expected to be back on track in six months after
last week's surgery on his foot was declared a "success."
"We felt he did very well through the surgery," Thomas Clanton, the doctor
who performed the procedure at Memorial Hermann-Texas Medical Center in Houston,
said on Saturday. "It was exactly what we had anticipated finding. His prognosis
for running in the future is quite good."
Liu, 25, left the hospital yesterday morning Beijing time in a wheelchair,
looking relaxed and making faces at people outside the hospital. He jested that
his only feeling during the operation was being "hungry".
He needs six months for rehabilitation and the process "is as important as
the surgery", Liu's coach Sun Haiping said.
"The surgery is the first step and he still needs a careful recovery plan,"
he said.
Liu will go back to the hospital for further consultation on Wednesday and a
rehabilitation plan will be worked out after that.
"Liu has been a professional sportsman for a long time, so his physical
condition is very good, which will make his rehabilitation faster than for
normal people," Sun said.
"Liu will have a good rest and then walk with crutches. After the Spring
Festival (Jan 26), he may go jogging."
Liu will stay in Houston during his rehabilitation. "The doctor said the
rehabilitation needs some six months and we are not trying to rush him back to
training," Sun said.
A severe injury on Liu's right Achilles' tendon forced the 110m hurdles world
champion to pull out of the first round of the competition at the Beijing
Olympic Games in August - leaving him in excruciating pain and the whole nation
heart-broken.
During nearly three-hour-long surgery on Friday in Houston, Liu had four
small pieces of bone, about the size of peas, removed from the Achilles' tendon
in his right foot, including a bone spur between the Achilles' tendon and ankle
bone.
Clanton said the injury happened over a period of time, resulting in
microscopic tearing of the tendon's fibers, which cause bleeding. This process
produced calcium and resulted in the bone pieces forming within the tendon
itself.