The quick and cooling treatment of Buffalo Bills' Kevin Everett spurs interest in its use in spinal cord injuries.
By Janet Cromley and Jeannine Stein
Los Angeles Times Staff Writers
Buffalo Bills tight end Kevin Everett's remarkable progress after a
recent spinal injury has ignited hopes that one component of his
treatment -- therapeutic
Hypothermia -- could represent a breakthrough
for other victims of spinal cord injuries.
But while promising, rapidly cooling the body following
catastrophic spine injury may not become standard practice. The
treatment has yet to be proven effective in clinical trials, and it
appears to increase the risk of infection and cardiac arrhythmias.
In fact, many physicians believe that it was the quick action of the
response team, rather than the cooling, that made the difference in
Everett's case.
The initial word on Everett -- who crumpled to the ground after making
a seemingly routine tackle in the Bills' season opener two weeks ago
against the Denver Broncos -- was grim.
Tests would reveal a catastrophic, and potentially life-threatening,
fracture and dislocation of his spine at the third and fourth
Cervical
Vertebrae, known as C3 and C4. The third cervical vertebra had gotten
shoved over the front of the fourth cervical vertebra -- like boxcars
buckled up on a track -- and locked into place, causing a serious
compression on the spinal cord. The higher up the injury, the greater
the loss of movement on the body, says Dr. Mark Spoonamore, director of
USC's Center for Spinal Surgery.
The vertebrae are numbered sequentially, from C1 at the top to C7 at
the bottom. "Christopher Reeve was a C2, and you saw what happened to
him," Spoonamore says. "At C3 to C4, you still are looking at possible
Quadriplegia," as well as paralysis of the diaphragm, which would mean
being dependent on a
Ventilator to breathe.
But the Bills' medical team worked fast. Within 15 minutes of the
injury, Everett was in an ambulance, where Bills orthopedic surgeon Dr.
Andrew Cappuccino administered steroid methylprednisolone and cold
saline, intravenously, to reduce inflammation and swelling in the
injured area and to induce moderate hypothermia, lowering his
temperature by 4 to 5 degrees. Within six hours of the injury, Everett
was in surgery.
The surgical processThe four-hour operation that Cappuccino and
Dr. Kevin Gibbons, a neurosurgeon, performed on Everett at Millard
Fillmore Gates Hospital, in Buffalo, is fairly standard for Everett's
type of injury.
With Everett on his back, the physicians performed what is known as an
Anterior cervical discectomy and realignment of C3 and C4, which
involved removing the disc between the vertebrae, and realigning and
stabilizing the spine with placement of a bone graft and metal plate.
Then they turned Everett over, made an incision in the back of his
neck, placed screws into the affected vertebrae on both sides and
connected them by small rods. They also performed a
Laminectomy,
removing some bone from the affected vertebrae to provide more room for
the cord. Two days after the operation, in what some say was a miracle,
Everett started moving his arms and legs.
Therapeutic hypothermia is used for certain types of heart surgery and
brain injuries, but its efficacy in the treatment of spinal injuries
has not been established.
Continuing research by the Miami Project to Cure Paralysis, a renowned
spinal-cord-injury research center at the University of Miami, on
effects of hypothermia on spinal cord injuries, suggests that cooling
the nervous system may decrease spinal cell damage.
Hypothermia reduces inflammation, free radical formation, swelling, and
cell death, says Dalton Dietrich, scientific director for the project.
"Mild hypothermia is protective because it targets multiple injury
processes [not just one]." And often it's the aftermath of a spinal
injury that determines the fate of the injured.
"We know that within the first hours after a spinal cord injury,
there's a wave of degenerative processes that are triggered, and if
blocked early enough, the severity can be reduced," says Oswald
Steward, director of the Reeve-Irvine Research Center at UC Irvine.
"Cells designed to protect the body against bacteria enter the spinal
cord," he says, "and as a consequence of releasing chemicals to kill
bacteria, they also cause 'bystander' injuries to the nerve cells."
These toxic chemicals can damage nerve cells. "It's part of the wave of
devastation that occurs," he says. Preventing further damage in the
secondary phase "allows cells that are traumatized, but not actually
dead, to recover their function."
Although researchers such as Dietrich and his colleagues at the Miami
Project have been studying the effects of hypothermia for decades,
clinical data is scant because of the inherent difficulties in
conducting randomized clinical studies with spinal injuries.
In addition to not fully understanding the effect of cooling on humans,
researchers are still in the dark in terms of such basic questions as
whether the entire body -- or just the injured portions -- should be
cooled; how long the cooling should last; how quickly the body should
be warmed afterward; and even whether cooling might have unexpected
long-term effects. And simply getting the patient cooled is
problematic, as hypothermia has to be initiated quickly, Dietrich says.
Even the rapid administration of the steroid methylprednisolone may not
have been all that beneficial, suggest some researchers. "Administering
steroids following a traumatic injury became standard practice years
ago, believing that it reduces
Secondary Injury, but now some
researchers are questioning its value," says Jerry Silver, professor of
neurosciences at Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine in
Cleveland.
"In experiments on rats, it showed some effect, and in clinical trials
it was suggested there was a minor effect," he says, but there's also
debate whether the side effects are worth the risk. Side effects
include increased risk of immune problems down the road. Regardless, it
may not have been any of these things individually that helped Everett
regain movement.
"I think the critical thing they did," Spoonamore says, "was they
immediately got him on a backboard, got him to the hospital,
immediately identified the problem and immediately treated him and took
the pressure off the spinal cord with the surgery."
Pushing science forwardIt's also possible, Spoonamore says, that
Everett's injury didn't bruise the spinal cord as seriously as
originally thought, and he was destined to recover regardless of the
treatment.
"I've treated a number of patients who've been totally [paralyzed] on
the initial examination," he says, "and you start the steroids and
treat them very quickly, and then miraculously they do recover" over
the following days and weeks as the swelling dissipates. Because of all
the things done for Everett, it's almost impossible to determine which
intervention was most important.
"The big difference [in this case]," Steward says, "was that the level
of care Everett received was extraordinary. If someone injures their
spinal cord in an auto accident, it may take hours to even get them out
of the car, much less take them to the hospital."
Everett's extraordinary treatment is a remarkable boon for science,
adds Dr. Larry Khoo, co-director of the UCLA Comprehensive Spine Center.
"Sometimes it takes an event like this to push science forward," he
says. "Kevin Everett was the perfect candidate for this. He was in
perfect health and received this treatment by a spinal surgeon who was
fully prepared. It doesn't get any better than that." As of Thursday,
11 days after the injury, Everett was able to move his legs with 80% to
90% normal strength and was moving his shoulders and biceps with 50% to
60% normal strength. Friday he was transferred from Millard Fillmore
Gates Circle Hospital in Buffalo to the Institute for
Rehabilitation
and Research at Memorial Hermann hospital in Houston to begin a
rehabilitation program, according to a spokesman from the Bills.
Everett's hands were still weak but improving. His doctors believe he
will walk again -- either a testament to medical technology, miraculous
intervention, blind luck, or a bit of all three.