This is an archived article and the information in the article may be outdated. Please look at the time stamp on the story to see when it was last updated.

MEMPHIS, Tenn. — A family is determined to help a cosmetologist-turned-quadruple amputee get prosthetic arms.

Valarie Price is on an unthinkable journey. The 44-year-old grandmother became a quadruple amputee losing both of her hands and feet in 2019. Before this challenge, she was a well-known cosmetologist in Clarksdale, Mississippi and loved doing hair.

WREG spoke with Valarie’s sister Jamekia Phillips and her brother Larry Price from California and Florida.

“My sister Valarie was very independent,” Price said.

In 2019, she had a dental procedure. Doctors discovered Valarie had leukemia. She underwent chemotherapy, became sick and had to be put on a ventilator.

“She had to be put on a ventilator because she had become septic,” Phillips said. “During that time, there was a particular medication they put her on, and it basically stopped circulation to her limbs.”

Her family said once she became stable, her hands and feet were in a state of rigor mortis, and it required to be amputated.

Valarie’s family is now on a mission to get her Hero Arms, which is a form of prosthetic arms from the company Open Bionics.

Valarie

At just 44 years old and now in remission from her initial diagnosis, having prosthetics would give Valarie a sense of normalcy to continue achieving her dreams and goals.

“It would mean the world,” Price said. “Being down for two plus years, not being able to do anything when you’re so lively. She does have aspirations and dreams that she wants to continue.”

The family credits Open Bionics for helping them. They’re trying to raise more than $21,000.

Click here to donate to Valarie’s GoFundMe.