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'I THOUGHT HE WAS DEAD'

Sleepwalking dad, 56, left paralysed after falling downstairs

A DAD has been left paralysed after falling downstairs — while SLEEPWALKING.

Former caretaker Colin White, 56, went to bed with his wife as usual but woke up in agony at the bottom of the staircase, unable to move.

 Colin White was left paralysed from the hip up after falling down his stairs while sleepwalking
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Colin White was left paralysed from the hip up after falling down his stairs while sleepwalkingCredit: South West News Service

Colin, who is married to wife Jo White, is now paralysed from the hip up and is in need of constant care and assistance.

Nursing assistance Jo, 55, said: "Our lives have changed completely.

"It was like he has just stepped into darkness.

"He went to bed as normal, we were talking a bit in bed and then we went to sleep.

"And all of a sudden I heard this thud, it was around three or four in the morning.

 The dad-of-one was previously wheelchair bound, but is now able to take a few steps with assistence
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The dad-of-one was previously wheelchair bound, but is now able to take a few steps with assistenceCredit: South West News Service

"I thought he had gone to the toilet but when I got up to look I just saw him in a heap at the bottom of the stairs.

"I thought it knocked him out and I could see blood coming from his head — I thought he was dead."

Doctors say the father-of-one damaged his spinal cord in the accident leaving him with tetraplegia which restricts movement of the limbs.

Tetraplegia, also known as quadriplegia, is paralysis caused by illness or injury that results in the partial or total loss of use of all four limbs and torso.

 Jo, Colin's wife, said she awoke in the middle of the night when she heard a 'thud'
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Jo, Colin's wife, said she awoke in the middle of the night when she heard a 'thud'Credit: South West News Service

Jo says her husband cannot remember falling down the stairs which is why doctors and his family believe he was sleepwalking.

She adds: "He would regularly sleepwalk before this but he would normally make enough noise for me to wake up and bring him back to bed.

"When he fell all he kept saying was 'where am I' because he just didn't know where he was — it put him into darkness.

"I said 'come on get up', and all he said was 'I can't move, I can't move' — so I called an ambulance.

 Colin pictured before the unusual accident
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Colin pictured before the unusual accidentCredit: South West News Service

"He doesn't remember any of it and his brain is still all there, which is good."

The incident happened on 16 December 2017 and since then Colin has began intensive rehabilitation at a specialist spinal unit in Sheffield as well as weekly physiotherapy sessions.

Colin is now able to walk a few steps with assistance where he was previously wheelchair bound.

Jo added: "It is really hard to deal with for him — it has been a totally different life for us.

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"It's so scary because you never expect something like that to happen in your home."

The St Edmundsbury Male Voice Choir, in Suffolk is hosting a concert in aid of Colin on Thursday, February 7.

To donate contact Jo White on Facebook.


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