By JENNIFER KAY, Associated Press Writer
Kevin Everett and Marc Buoniconti each suffered a severe spinal cord
injury while making a tackle. The difference between them on Friday was
the result of more than 20 years of research.
Buoniconti has used a wheelchair since being paralyzed while playing football for The Citadel in 1985.
Everett walked through the lobby of The Miami
Project to Cure Paralysis just about seven months after he crumpled
face-down on the turf following a tackle in which his helmet struck
another player's helmet and shoulder pad.
The former Buffalo Bills tight end praised the
experimental therapies being developed at the world's largest spinal
cord injury research center.
"You can see it works," Everett said. "They practically saved my
life. They got me to where I wanted to be again, moving and walking
around."
He stood tall next to Buoniconti, Dr. Barth Green, the Miami
Project's co-founder, and Dr. Dalton Dietrich, its scientific director.
Green started the project in 1985 with three families whose loved ones
had suffered spinal cord injuries, including Buoniconti, son of pro
football Hall of Fame linebacker Nick Buoniconti.
"To be able to see the work of the Miami Project pay off by being
part of Kevin's recovery, it means the world to us," Buoniconti said.
"To see how far the research has come, it goes to show you how close we
are to actually finding a cure."
Everett has made incredible progress, though his Rehabilitation continues.
"I'm still working on the dexterity in my hands, being able to do
everyday stuff such as brush my hair, tie my shoes," he said. "It's
getting better."
Doctors initially feared Everett would never walk after he collapsed
on the Bills' home turf Sept. 9. He remained motionless for several
minutes while medical personnel tried to figure out what was wrong.
Everett was paralyzed from the neck down when he arrived at a
Buffalo hospital, and spent the first few days on life support. He
would need four hours of surgery to realign his neck and stabilize it
with screws, rods and a titanium plate.
But what helped save his mobility happened just minutes after he
went down. Bills doctor Andrew Cappuccino placed Everett into moderate
Hypothermia as he was carted to an ambulance. Cappuccino learned the
experimental method to limit swelling and inflammation at a Miami
Project seminar.
The therapy is analogous to an ice pack for the spine.
A few days later, Everett showed movement in his legs and arms and
was sensitive to touch. He improved so steadily during the first two
weeks that he was transferred to Houston for the next stage of his
rehab.
Cappuccino continued consulting with Green on Everett's status until the player was transferred to Houston.
Coincidentally, Bills owner Ralph Wilson had been among Green's
other surgical patients. In 1997, Green operated to relieve a narrowing
around the spine that was pinching off the nerves to Wilson's feet.
Everett said he was establishing a foundation to contribute to the
research at the Miami Project, starting with a fashion show fundraiser
Saturday in Miami Beach. The program is based at the Miller School of
Medicine at the University of Miami, Everett's alma mater.
"We're hoping that Kevin and his foundation will spread the word:
More research needs to be done, patients deserve better treatment,"
Green said.
The Miami Project also has received a $113,000 grant from the NFL to continue its research into hypothermic therapy.
South Florida paramedics are currently being trained to
administer the moderate hypothermia therapy Everett received to people
who suffer heart attacks and traumatic brain and spinal injuries, said
Green, chairman of Miller's neurological surgery department at the
University of Miami school of medicine.
"Dr. Cappuccino showed us it was feasible," Green said.