In
February, Ruslana Danilkina, a 19-year-old Ukrainian soldier, came
under fire near the front line around Zaporizhzhia in southeastern
Ukraine. Shrapnel tore her left leg off above the knee. She clutched her
severed thigh bone and watched medics place her severed leg into the
vehicle that took her to a hospital.
“I
was holding the bone in my hands… there and then I realized that this
was the end, that my life would never be the same again,” Danilkina
said.
Danilkina
is one of between 20,000 and 50,000 Ukrainians who have lost one or
more limbs since the start of the war, according to previously
undisclosed estimates by prosthetics firms, doctors and charities.
The
actual figure could be higher because it takes time to register
patients after they undergo the procedure. Some are only amputated weeks
or months after being wounded. And with Kyiv’s counteroffensive under way, the war may be entering a more brutal phase.
By
comparison, some 67,000 Germans and 41,000 Britons had to have
amputations during the course of World War I, when the procedure was
often the only one available to prevent death. Fewer than 2,000 U.S.
veterans of the Afghanistan and Iraq invasions had amputations.
Ukraine’s
government didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment about
the figures. Kyiv has kept precise casualty statistics secret so as not
to demoralize the population. But even as a rough estimate, the number
casts light on the staggering human cost of Russia’s 17-month
onslaught—a cost that will linger for decades.
Germany’s
Ottobock, the world’s largest prosthetics manufacturer, which is
working with Kyiv to help amputees, estimates the number of amputees at
about 50,000 based on data from the government and medical partners. At
the lower end, the Kyiv-based charity Health of the Ukrainian People ICF
puts the number of serious injuries caused by the war at 200,000. About
10% of serious injuries typically require amputations, according to the
foundation.
Such
numbers reflect how Russia wages the war, with heavy use of mines and
artillery, missile and drone attacks targeting soldiers and civilians
alike.
“My
grandfather founded our company in 1919 to help…German soldiers
returning from World War I wounded by artillery fire, who lost their
arms, legs or eyesight—this is exactly what we see in Ukraine,” said
Hans Georg Näder, Ottobock’s chairman.
Danilkina
had five operations before receiving an artificial leg from Ottobock
with the help of Superhumans, a charitable foundation based in the
western city of Lviv.
She
has since turned 20 and has been documenting her recovery on social
media under the nickname Unbreakable Rusya. On Monday, she received a
more sophisticated leg called Genium X3 developed by Ottobock with the
U.S. military that allows users to easily climb stairs or even walk
backward.
Denys
Kryvenko, a 24-year-old former steelworker from Kropyvnytskiy in
central Ukraine, was drafted last year and lost both legs and his left
arm in the battle for Bakhmut in January. Before the injury he was 6
feet 1 inch tall but now stands at 5 feet 6 inches on his artificial
legs.
Both
Kryvenko and Danilkina now work with Superhumans to help other
amputees. Their social-network activism and media appearances have
turned them into symbols of Ukrainian suffering and resilience.
Making
enough artificial limbs, some of which cost over 50,000 euros,
equivalent to around $55,000, isn’t the main challenge: The bigger
bottleneck is expert staff to care for amputees, each of whom needs a
tailor-made prosthetic, Näder said. Kyiv pays up to €20,000 per military
amputee but civilians often struggle to afford treatment. Ottobock
grants a discount for Ukrainians and provides free training for doctors
and technicians there. Still, many patients must rely on charities to
obtain prostheses.
Before
the Russian invasion last year, Ukraine had several thousand
amputations annually, but its healthcare system is now overwhelmed,
according to Ukrainian doctors and specialist clinics, with many
patients waiting more than a year for a new limb. Doctors in Lviv alone
performed over 53,000 surgeries in the past year, said Oleksandr
Kobzarev, an executive with Unbroken, a network of medical
rehabilitation centers.
Superhumans
chief executive Olga Rudneva says her foundation only has the capacity
to admit some 50 amputees each month. She estimates the number of
amputees as at least 20,000 since last year.
Patients
should get new limbs at the latest 90 days after amputation to avoid
atrophy and other problems, Rudneva said, but many have waited for over a
year. Young children among the amputees are particularly difficult to
care for, she said, because they must change several prostheses by the
time they become adults.
Oleksandra
Paskal, 7, lost her leg in a Russian missile attack near Odesa in May
2022. Her mother Maria, who partially lost her hearing in the explosion,
says her daughter is woken at night by phantom pain in the lost limb—a
frequent neurological condition in amputees.
Dr.
Jennifer Ernst, head of the Innovative Amputation Medicine department
at the Hannover University Hospital in Germany, specializes in bionic
surgery involving connecting nerves to prosthetic limbs. She recently
operated on a soldier who lost both legs in an attack that killed his
entire unit.
Like
many Ukrainian patients evacuated abroad after serious trauma, the
soldier had an antibiotic-resistant bacterial infection, forcing Ernst
to remove significant pieces of leg tissue. Despite successes—one
patient’s arm was saved by a 3D-printed bone implant—she says most have
to be amputated because of advanced infections.
Last
year, her clinic admitted a 16-year-old boy who lost an arm when a
Russian missile hit a Kyiv metro station. The blast killed his younger
sister but left their mother only lightly injured.
Out
of 100 soldiers wounded within about 3 miles of the front line, 36%
suffered very severe injuries, while between 5% and 10% of all deployed
troops were killed, according to Ukrainian military estimates shared
with a group of U.S. military surgeons. In comparison, only 1.3% to 2%
of U.S. troops deployed in recent conflicts died in action.
Western
military surgeons haven’t seen such injuries on this scale since World
War II, said Dr. Aaron Epstein, head of the Global Surgical and Medical
Support Group of former military surgeons who train Ukrainian military
medics.
While
artillery and missiles were the main causes of amputation early in the
conflict, some of the worst casualties now come from mines laid along
the 600-mile front line. Between 40 and 80 patients report to hospitals
in the city of Zaporizhzhia with traumas each day, including amputees
coming from the front line some 25 miles away, said Dr. Kostyantyn
Mylytsya, medical director of the private KSM Clinic.
Mylytsya
focused on cosmetic surgery before the war. Now his clinic treats and
rehabilitates amputees. Such centers, he says, are needed “in every town
across Ukraine; they must be as common as dentists.”
A
former British paratrooper serving in Ukraine’s armed forces lost his
foot in a mine explosion in June. He had previously been wounded in
April last year, a month after volunteering to fight, when a Russian
cruise missile hit his unit’s headquarters. He spent five months in
Ukrainian and British hospitals but returned to the southern front as
soon as he could.
In
June, his unit launched a nightly raid on Russian forces but suffered
devastating losses. His team spent the night cowering in the basement of
an abandoned school before attacking again. They drove past destroyed
Western Leopard tanks, Humvees and Bradley infantry fighting vehicles.
The severed limbs of their comrades lay scattered on the ground.
The
soldiers used broken sticks to tap their way forward to detect hidden
mines. As he was setting up a machine gun near an abandoned Russian
trench, the 28-year-old stepped on an antipersonnel mine.
“I screamed and fell in the direction of travel, and I was lucky not to hit another mine,” he said.
He
was evacuated to a field hospital where doctors saved his leg but cut
off most of his left foot. He said many in his unit were hospitalized
after the raid. Most of the soldiers who accompanied them died.
Now, waiting for treatment in the U.S., he said he intends to return to his regiment—even if only as an instructor.
“This war is horrendous and now I, too, am crippled…But I don’t regret it,” he said.