By Pat Shellenbarger
The Grand Rapids Press
GRAND RAPIDS -- Wanyae Givens' chances of surviving
the auto accident that nearly severed his spine at the base
of his skull were extremely slim.
But less than two weeks after he nearly died, the
13-year-old Burton Middle School seventh-grader, although
unable to speak, is the one assuring his mother and other
family members he will be OK.
Injured in a car crash Feb. 10, he communicates by blinking
his eyes -- once for "no," twice for
"yes."
Wanyae suffered what doctors call a "shear
injury."
The impact of the auto accident separated his skull from the
top of his Cervical spine and stretched his spinal cord,
nearly severing it at the base of his skull.
"These injuries are very serious in that the majority
of patients don't survive," said Dr. James
Stubbart, the orthopedic spinal surgeon who treated Wanyae
at Helen DeVos Children's Hospital. "Very few of
these patients make it to the hospital. It's
unquestionably a rarely survivable event in a child."
In his eight years with Spectrum Health, he has seen only
one other child survive such a severe spinal cord injury,
Stubbart said. He credited the EMS crew with saving
Wanyae's life by immediately stabilizing his neck.
Doctors first realigned his skull and spine with traction.
Stubbart then fused the skull to the upper cervical spine
with metal rods, screws and bone transplanted from
Wanyae's hip. He also suffered a broken left femur and
right wrist.
He was a passenger in a car driven by his brother, Cholonni
Madison, who had just dropped off their mother at work. At
28th Street SE and Eastern Avenue, Madison lost control of
the car on icy pavement, and it slid into the path of
another car. A second passenger, Alan Martinez, 19, also was
critically injured and remains hospitalized. His injuries
were not disclosed.
The impact pinned Wanyae in the back seat, and rescuers had
to extricate him with a hydraulic rescue tool. He was not
breathing, his great-uncle, T.A. El Amin, said Thursday.
Three days later, Wanyae, who goes by the nickname Duke, had
recovered some feeling in his arms and legs, but still is
unable to move, El Amin said.
"He actually smiled yesterday," his godmother and
cousin, Tuere Sims, said Thursday, the day he turned 13.
"We're thanking God this is another birthday. So
we're celebrating his birthday today and life and
miracles. Duke is duking it out. We're calling him our
miracle boy."
His mother has not left his bedside since the accident, Sims
said. His room is filled with balloons and cards from
friends and well-wishers at his school and church,
Revolution Christian Ministries, where Wanyae is an active
member.
When his mother, Raketa Givens, asked her son if he was
fighting to recover the use of his arms and legs, he blinked
twice.
"Wanyae is setting the tone," Sims said.
"He's letting us know, 'Don't
worry.' He's at peace. He's not talking, but
he's blinking away to let his mother know he's OK.
That's Wanyae. He wants her to know he's OK."
Added El Amin: "He's a special little guy with
friends everywhere. He's the type of guy, if he walked
in, he'd make friends."
His mother, just short of her one-year anniversary at work,
does not have health insurance, Sims said. The family has
set up a fund at all branches of the Lake Michigan Credit
Union in Wanyae's name to help pay his medical bills.
His family expects he eventually will be transferred to the
University of Michigan Health System in Ann Arbor to undergo
therapy.
"We know this is going to be a long road," Sims
said, "but we're in it for the long haul."
Stubbart said his prognosis remains uncertain.
"Statistically, it's not good that he'll
regain the use of his extremities, but it's
possible," he said. "I always want to hope for the
best. I've seen people with equally severe injuries
recover."
His family members expressed optimism Wanyae will recover.
"We think it's going to be 100 percent," El
Amin said.
Send e-mail to the author: pshellenbarger@grpress.com