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Kevin Everett, the Buffalo Bills
player who was paralyzed after breaking his neck on the football field,
will soon walk. That’s what doctors said as he was transferred
from Buffalo to a Houston hospital today, less than two weeks after
sustaining a life-threatening spinal cord injury.
“Soon… they’re going to stand him up,” Dr.
Barth Green, president of The Miami Project to Cure Paralysis, told the
Associated Press. “(Doctors are) very confident he’ll be
walking very soon… in the next days or weeks, not months.”
Incredible news. Some would consider Everett’s progress a miracle.
But it’s not.
There
were many steps taken before and after the tight end fell limp on the
field. It started 22 years ago when Marc Buoniconti collapsed from
making a tackle for The Citadel and was paralyzed for life.
His
father, Nick Buoniconti, is an NFL Hall of Fame linebacker and a former
HBO football show host. After his son’s injury, Nick Buoniconti
joined a group to establish The Miami Project, now one of the
world’s leading neurological research centers and located on the
University of Miami campus.
Over the years, Nick and Marc put
a face to spinal cord injuries and the Buoniconti Fund
(www.thebuonicontifund.com/) raised millions for The Miami Project
(www.miamiproject.miami.edu/), which today has an impressive list of
researchers, clinicians and therapists whose purpose is to find a cure.
Christopher Reeve, the former actor, was treated at The Miami
Project when he was paralyzed after being thrown from a horse in 1995.
Reeve later also established a foundation to pursue a cure.
All
the work, all the hopes, and unfortunately all the new cases of
paralyzes (10,000-12,000 per year in the United States) culminated when
Kevin Everett ran down the field full speed to open the second half
against the Denver Broncos.
Marc Buoniconti checked his e-mail
and relived his own tragedy as he read of Everett’s injury
moments after it happened. Buoniconto said in a South Florida
Sun-Sentinel article that he had a flashback to the time he
couldn’t feel his body and thought: “Oh my God, I broke my
neck. I’m paralyzed.”
When Marc snapped back to
reality, he called Bills owner Ralph Wilson and asked how The Miami
Project could help. Ironically, Wilson is one of the project’s
biggest financial donors.
Green contacted the Buffalo doctors,
who already knew of project’s work with hypothermia, or cooling
of the body, as a way to treat spinal-cord trauma. Within 15 minutes of
the injury, cold saline solution flowed through Everett’s body
and lowered his temperature to 92 degrees. It reduced the swelling.
Doctors likened it to putting an ice pack on a sprained ankle or knee.
www.webmd.com/brain/news/20070912/buffalo-bills-everett-may-walk-again?src=rss_psychtoday
Initially,
the prognosis was not good. Everett’s injury was
“catastrophic.” Doctors said full recovery was not likely.
Then Tuesday (Sept. 11) came and Everett was taken off sedation and his
limbs started to move.
Green would tell the Sun-Sentinel,
“For us, it’s hard to describe. It’s basically
everything Nick Buoniconti and Marc and I have dreamed
about—actually getting people walking out of the hospital.
It’s a surreal feeling.
“Added to the fact is Mr.
Wilson being so important to us here and a University of Miami player
is involved—more irony, considering we’re part of the
University of Miami. It’s karma. It’s amazing. It’s
all a bit mind-boggling.”
There’s one more bit of
information that’s numbing. Green added that Everett’s
injury to the C-3 and C-4 vertebrae was exactly the same as Marc
Buoniconti’s.
“If this treatment was available 20 years ago, Marc would be walking right now,” Green said to the Sun-Sentinel.
This
year, the NFL stopped funding a Miami Project grant that studied spinal
cord and brain injuries. Perhaps Everett’s accident will bring
the league back.
So if you have one dollar to give, one dollar
to add to a collective lump that will improve the world, consider
giving it to the Buoniconti Fund. You never know when karma will save
your life.
by Gage Harter - richmondmagazine.blogspot.com