OMAHA, Neb.(AP)
The 55-year-old Omaha man who performed a tracheotomy on himself
with a steak knife says he did the same thing to himself two years
ago.
Steve Wilder said Friday that his throat is shrunken because of
radiation treatments for cancer. Those treatments ended four years
ago, but scar tissue remains. He said seasonal allergies may have
caused his struggle to breathe overnight April 30.
"I didn't feel no pain. I was just trying to
survive," Wilder said in his high-pitched, gravelly voice.
"I got relief right away. There was a big gush of blood, and I
was able to start sucking in air."
Wilder said he fell asleep watching television in his basement
but awakened when he felt himself suffocating. His wife, Cora,
called an ambulance.
"I thought they might get here fast enough that I
wouldn't have to do that," he said. "But I
couldn't breathe no more."
He bolted for the kitchen and picked up a steak knife and made a
quarter-inch incision.
"I knew that would chop it open pretty good," he
said.
After medics took him to a hospital, he was given antibiotics to
prevent a possible infection. The next day his physician inserted a
tube in his throat.
Wilder, who did not give his occupation, said he's working
again and feeling good.
He said he's had three tracheotomies since 2004. He
performed the first one on himself in 2006 under similar
circumstances.
"They think I might have some kind of allergy," Wilder
said. "The only time I get a shortage of wind is in the
spring. It's seasonal."
A spokeswoman for Immanuel Medical Center, Lora Ullerich, said
Friday that because of federal medical privacy restrictions she
would not be able to comment on Wilder's situation.
A tracheotomy, a procedure that opens up the windpipe, typically
is done in a surgical setting. Wilder said he isn't ready to
perform tracheotomies on other people.
But his doctor told him that he did a pretty good job on
himself.
"I told him we should split the bill then," Wilder
said.
Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.