Associated Press
Kevin Everett
is recovering after having minor surgery this week to relieve pain in
his neck, which was related to the severe spinal cord injury that
nearly left the Buffalo
Bills tight end paralyzed last September.
"He's doing OK," Eric Armstead said Wednesday. Armstead is an attorney and associate of Everett's agent, Brian Overstreet.
The
operation, performed at a Buffalo hospital, was initially scheduled for
Tuesday, but pushed up to Monday, forcing Everett to cancel an
appearance at a news conference. Everett was in town to announce a golf
tournament and tailgate party scheduled for early July to benefit his
newly established foundation to advance spinal cord injury research.
Everett was initially paralyzed from the neck down while attempting to make a tackle in the Bills'
season opener on Sept. 9. He is now walking on his own since being
released from a Houston Rehabilitation facility in November.
Orthopedic
surgeon Andrew Cappuccino, who has treated Everett since he was hurt,
performed the most recent surgery. He termed the latest operation as a
"a very minor procedure," in an interview with Buffalo's WIVB-TV.
"Over
the course of the last few months, the parts below his injured area,
just one level, became loose and needed a very minor procedure to shore
them up, to make them stable so he wouldn't have neck pain," Cappuccino
said.
Cappuccino did not return several messages left for him by The Associated Press.