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“My goal was to walk by the wedding”
On Halloween of 2015, just weeks after Caleb Clark started a new job at a vet clinic, a bull charged him, demolishing his knee. An hour away from his home outside Lebanon and with no one else at the clinic, he called his fiancée, Amelia, who called an ambulance.
“They wanted to take him to the local hospital,” said Amelia. “But the EMT made the call and said no, he needed to go to UK.”
![A family photo of Caleb, Amelia, and Cason in front of Caleb's family cabin.](/sites/default/files/styles/medium_sqaure/public/caleb-clark-02.jpg?itok=XBuDnQ2J)
![Close up of a framed wedding photograph of Caleb and Amelia kissing.](/sites/default/files/styles/medium_sqaure/public/caleb-clark-07.jpg?itok=rZqw_Q86)
![Caleb and Amelia show their son Cason some cows grazing in a pasture on their farm.](/sites/default/files/styles/medium_sqaure/public/caleb-clark-10.jpg?itok=q4cp2-0e)
![Caleb and his young song Cason sit and smile together on some steps for a photo outside.](/sites/default/files/styles/medium_sqaure/public/caleb-clark-09.jpg?itok=pvKyZqwk)
That call saved Caleb’s leg. The responders to the scene didn’t realize it at the time, but in addition to dislocating Caleb’s knee and tearing his ACL, his PCL and his LCL, the bull had also torn open an artery. Led by vascular surgeon Dr. Joseph Bobadilla, the team at UK HealthCare performed emergency surgery to repair the artery.
“Dr. Bobadilla said it was the worst knee he’d ever been able to save,” said Amelia.
Once the artery healed, Caleb underwent another surgery by orthopedic surgeon Dr. Darren Johnson to repair his ACL, PCL and LCL, followed by several more surgeries to clear infections from his knee. He wore an external fixator for six weeks, healing up and slowly learning to walk again.
![Caleb shows off Puddin, one of his family’s show heifers.](/sites/default/files/styles/medium_sqaure/public/caleb-clark-03.jpg?itok=lrO4MO9H)
![Close up of Caleb's knee and calf. A very long, deep scar runs the length of the side of his leg from all the reconstructive surgeries he had.](/sites/default/files/styles/medium_sqaure/public/caleb-clark-04.jpg?itok=g8pHuFBP)
![Black and white photo of Caleb and Amelia sleeping in his hospital bed. Caleb's knee has an external fixator attached to stabilize it.](/sites/default/files/styles/medium_sqaure/public/caleb-clark-05-1.jpg?itok=_-VKH2WT)
![Close up of a refrigerator door covered in wedding photos and baby photos of Cason.](/sites/default/files/styles/medium_sqaure/public/caleb-clark-06.jpg?itok=SjikHGoi)
![Caleb and Amelia watch Cason play with a toy tractor at their dining room table.](/sites/default/files/styles/medium_sqaure/public/caleb-clark-08.jpg?itok=GdfXwcRz)
Caleb and Amelia, who have been together since they were 14, were planning to get married the June after his accident. Through the long rehab process, Caleb kept their wedding in his mind.
“The first thing I said to him when I saw him during our first look was, ‘Where are your crutches?’” Amelia remembered. “And he never used them again. That was pretty amazing.”
Three and a half years later, you’d never know what Caleb went through. Aside from an impressive scar and a few occasional twinges, his knee is fully functional again. Caleb is able to continue working at the vet clinic, tending 200 head of cattle on the farm he works with his father, and chasing after his and Amelia’s 18-month-old son.
“If it wasn’t for UK HealthCare, there’s no way he’d be able to work where he does. There’s no way we’d be able to have the farm that we do,” said Amelia. “We’re really blessed.”