Canberra: Wheelchair-bound former New Zealand all-rounder Chris Cairns says he is "very lucky to be alive", three months after a medical emergency left him on life support.
The 51-year-old is currently recovering from a spinal stroke that left him paralysed waist down, following several complicated surgeries.
"We don't know what happens going forward. I don't know if I'll walk, I don't know if I'll stand. But I may stand. I may walk. The only option is to keep going. The thing is I'm not even just lucky to be (alive). I'm very lucky," Cairns was quoted as saying by a media outlet.
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As he opened up on his life post the scare, Cairns was flanked by his wife Melanie.
Son of Lance Cairns, who was also an all-rounder for the New Zealand team in the 1970s and 80s, Cairns junior had suffered a major medical emergency -- an aortic dissection -- in August and was transferred to a specialist hospital in Sydney, where he had undergone a life-saving emergency heart surgery before facing more complications in the wake of the spinal stroke.
Aortic dissection is a serious medical condition in which a tear happens in the inner layer of the body's main artery (aorta).
He has been cleared to start "using his chest and arms for the first time in three months as he continues his recovery".