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Corky, Kitten Born With Criss-Crossed Legs, Saved By Breakthrough Leg Surgery (SLIDESHOW, VIDEO)

Posted: 04/24/2012 3:22 pm

Corky Corkscrew Surgery Cat Kitten

After a months-long Facebook campaign that resulted in an outpouring of donations from animal lovers all over the world, staff members at CATS Cradle Shelter Rescue and Adoption in Fargo, North Dakota were able to arrange a life-saving surgery for Corky, a rescue kitten born with leg deformities.

During the 5-hour surgery performed on Thursday, April 5, Dr. Dan Burchill at Casselton Veterinary Services in North Dakota, worked to correct a rare congenital condition called "Bilateral Arthrogryposis of the Tarsus," which causes the legs to develop backwards and criss-crossed.

"Dr. Burchill is our hero. He basically invented this surgery for Corky," Cat's Cradle co-founder Gail Ventzke told the UK Daily Sun. "He's fallen for Corky, too. He comes in on his days off to personally change Corky’s bandages because he doesn't want anyone else to touch him."


Ventzke told The Huffington Post that she and fellow CATS Cradle Co-Founders Amber Schaffer and Carol Stefonek discovered Corky last year while visiting an animal pound in Moorhead, Minnesota. The three were picking up two other cats at the pound when employees asked if they were interesting in taking at a look at a third cat that they "just had to see for themselves."

They had no hesitation in rescuing Corky from the pound, where he was likely to be euthanized. Ventzke said they took him to North Dakota State University in order to diagnose his condition and then began contacting local vets and animal surgeons, many of whom were hesitant to treat the cat.

Their search eventually led them to Dr. Burchill, who consulted with a number of orthopedic surgeons before agreeing to perform a complicated leg surgery on Corky, which involved placing pins in his bones to reorient the legs and cutting the cat's Achilles tendons.

"The big deciding factor [in whether to perform the surgery] was whether he was neurologically okay, so that he could learn to train himself to walk after the surgery," Ventzke told The Huffington Post.

The surgery took longer than expected and Corky had to be given strong pain medications, according to CATS Cradle. Ventzke said that Corky is making a slow but steady recovery at the animal hospital, and is likely in store for a six month recovery period involving daily therapy.

CATS Cradle has released new footage of Corky learning to move around on his new legs, still heavily bandaged from procedure.

"He is taking steps, but he not walking like a normal cat," Ventzke said. "He has a ways to go before he takes off walking. He does have some rotary motion but not to the point where he walks -- he'll take three or four steps at a time and then drag himself. But he's slowly teaching himself -- he's going to therapy every single day."

In the meantime, staffers are trying to raise money to cover costs associated with the $2,500 surgery and Corky's recovery. Anyone who wishes to donate can visit the shelter's webpage.

Check out a video of Corky moving around after surgery, above, and a slideshow of Corky below, courtesy of Cat's Cradle CATS Cradle Shelter Rescue and Adoption:

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Photo courtesy CATS Cradle Rescue and Adoption

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After a months-long Facebook campaign that resulted in an outpouring of donations from animal lovers all over the world, staff members at CATS Cradle Shelter Rescue and Adoption in Fargo, North Dakota...
After a months-long Facebook campaign that resulted in an outpouring of donations from animal lovers all over the world, staff members at CATS Cradle Shelter Rescue and Adoption in Fargo, North Dakota...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
karen lyons kalmenson
i poem/paint, sometimes, i ain't
06:36 AM on 05/31/2012
have a wonderful, long, healthy life, little corky and the same to those who helped you☺♥☻
01:43 PM on 04/28/2012
He had one of his legs amputated now, as one of the legs was dying. He has already tried to get up and walk on his now three legs! He also got neutered, from what I understand.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
karen lyons kalmenson
i poem/paint, sometimes, i ain't
06:35 AM on 05/31/2012
three legged animals adjust quite well most of the time
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ArChiMi
Skeptic
05:22 PM on 04/27/2012
I love all the people who helped this cat and I love the content look on this cat's face.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
Kim0330
Purr, and the world purrs with you...
01:02 PM on 04/26/2012
Amazing, amazing story. I'm so glad that they were able to help this kitty.
07:59 AM on 04/26/2012
Unfortunately if you check out the Facebook page they have just announced that the surgery was not entirely successful and they are going to have to amputate one of his hind legs. Fingers crossed nothing else goes wrong and Corky survives this, we're all rooting for you.
03:53 PM on 04/25/2012
Go Corky!
01:58 PM on 04/25/2012
Thank you to the doctors who saved her life.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
karen lyons kalmenson
i poem/paint, sometimes, i ain't
09:43 AM on 04/25/2012
nice to see some kindhearted, nontwisted humans out there☺♥☻
08:42 PM on 04/24/2012
So glad this kitty was given a chance to live. Too many would have put down a cat with "twisted" legs. What a wonderful story.