Last updated 14:27 28/10/2010
A British woman had to pick her own head up off the ground after badly breaking her neck in a horrific fall from a horse, according to reports.
The Daily Express newspaper reports that 26-year-old Thea Maxfield suffered a horrific "hangman's fracture" - a clean break of her upper cervical vertebra - after she was bucked six metres into the air in the accident.
After she fell off the horse Ms Maxfield tried to get out of the animal's way, but found that when her body moved her head stayed where it was.
She was forced to cup her hands around her head and lift it back into place to avoid damaging her spinal cord after her vertebrae shattered.
"I had to literally pick my head up and carry it in my hands. I didn't have much hope of a recovery," she told the newspaper.
Doctors initially warned she would be paralysed and have to spend the rest of her life in a wheelchair.
But seven months after the fall she is back in the saddle, thanks to revolutionary technology developed for Formula 1 racing.
Ms Maxfield was fitted with a special head brace connected to a computer, which used sensors to assess the strength and weakness of her neck.
The same technology is used to monitor elite racing cars to assess steering, suspension and air-flow factors affecting performance.
From: http://www.stuff.co.nz/world/europe/4282323/Woman-loses-head-in-riding-accident
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