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  • Everett's injury 'catastrophic'

    http://sportsillustrated.cnn.com/200...x.html?cnn=yes

    ORCHARD PARK, N.Y. (AP) -- Kevin Everett sustained a "catastrophic" and life-threatening spinal-cord injury while trying to make a tackle during the Buffalo Bills' season opener and is unlikely to walk again, the surgeon who operated on him Monday said.

    "A best-case scenario is full recovery, but not likely," orthopedic surgeon Andrew Cappuccino said. "I believe there will be some permanent neurologic deficit."

    Everett was hurt Sunday after he ducked his head while tackling the Denver Broncos' Domenik Hixon during the second-half kickoff. Everett dropped face-first to the ground after his helmet hit Hixon high on the left shoulder and side of the helmet.

    Cappuccino noted the 25-year-old reserve tight end did have touch sensation throughout his body and also showed signs of movement. But he cautioned that Everett's injury was life-threatening because he was still susceptible to blood clots, infection and breathing failure.

    Everett is in the intensive care unit of Buffalo's Millard Fillmore Gates Hospital, where he is under sedation and breathing through a respirator as doctors wait for the swelling to lessen. Cappuccino said it will take up to three days to determine the severity of the injury and the recovery process.

    Cappuccino repaired a break between the third and fourth vertebrae and also alleviated the pressure on the spinal cord. In reconstructing his spine, doctors made a bone graft and inserted a plate, held in by four screws, and also inserted two small rods, held in place by another four screws.

    Doctors, however, weren't able to repair all the damage.

    Bills punter Brian Moorman immediately feared the worst when Everett showed no signs of movement as he was placed on a backboard and, with his head and body immobilized, carefully loaded into an ambulance.

    "It brought tears to my eyes," Moorman said after practice. He said the sight of Everett's motionless body brought back memories of Mike Utley, the former Detroit Lions guard, who was paralyzed below the chest after injuring his neck in a collision during a 1991 game.

    Utley, Moorman recalled, at least was able to give what's become a famous "thumbs up" sign as he was taken off the field. Everett didn't.

    "That's what I was waiting for, and that's what everybody else was waiting for," Moorman said. "And to have to walk back to the sideline and not see that made for a tough time."

    Utley, who lives in Washington state, was saddened to see replays of Everett's collision.

    "I'm sorry this young man got hurt," Utley told The AP. "It wasn't a cheap shot. It was a great form tackle and that's it."

    Cappuccino said Everett was alert and aware of the extent of his injuries.

    "I told Kevin that the chances for a full neurologic recovery were bleak, dismal," said Cappuccino, who works for the Bills as a consultant, specializing in spinal surgery. "I was honest with him, and he told me, 'Do everything you can to help me."'

    Cappuccino received permission to operate from Everett's mother, Patricia Dugas, who spoke by phone from her home in Houston. She and other family members arrived in Buffalo on Monday. Everett was born in Port Arthur, Texas, and played high school football there.

    Buffalo's 2005 third-round draft pick out of Miami, Everett missed his rookie season because of a knee injury. He spent most of last year playing special teams. He was hoping to make an impact as a receiver.

    The Bills now attempt to refocus while preparing to play at Pittsburgh on Sunday.

    "It's difficult because you know the situation," said running back Anthony Thomas, one of Everett's best friends on the team. "We have to move on. But he'll always be in our thoughts and in our prayers."

    Quarterback J.P. Losman said it was difficult to concentrate during practice.

    "It seems like every couple of seconds that go by it's always popping into your head," Losman said. "Going through a walk-through, we're looking for him, wanting to hear his voice."

    Coach Dick Jauron said NFL commissioner Roger Goodell called him Sunday evening, offering the league's support.

    "We honor ourselves by our work, and we honor Kevin by moving forward and working while never forgetting Kevin and never getting him out of our thoughts and prayers," Jauron said. "We're going to wait and see what the outcome is here and we're really hoping and praying for the best."

  • #2
    THIS IS VERY SAD NEWS! I SEEN HIT ON ESPN. LOOKED LIKE HE WAS LEADING WITH HELMET. NOT GOOD. I WISH HIM AND HIS FAMILY THE VERY BEST.

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    • #3
      This is very sad - I hate seeing things like this...

      Reminds me of David Pollack though - maybe he'll be back as soon as that guy was....

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      • #4
        Everyone here is praying for the guy like crazy. Its so sad, only 25 years old and they're saying his life is pretty much over. The latest news this morning is he may not even live after the surgery.

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        • #5
          They just reported that he will walk again. Crazy turn of events that he voluntarily moved his arms and legs. Someone's watching over him.

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          • #6
            Originally posted by Timma
            They just reported that he will walk again. Crazy turn of events that he voluntarily moved his arms and legs. Someone's watching over him.
            That is awesome and amazing!!! Here's an article on it for those who haven't read it:



            "September 12, 2007
            Doctor Says Bills’ Everett Will Walk Again
            By MATT HIGGINS

            BUFFALO, Sept. 11 — Two days after he was paralyzed during a game, and one day after doctors described his condition as potentially life-threatening, Buffalo Bills tight end Kevin Everett was moving his arms and legs Tuesday.

            The doctor who performed surgery on Everett, Andrew Cappuccino, said Everett’s condition had “improved.”

            Another doctor, who has consulted with Cappuccino, said Tuesday that Everett could eventually walk out of the hospital.

            “Kevin Everett is moving his arms and legs, his legs stronger than his arms,” said the consulting doctor, the neurosurgeon Barth Green. “He’s moving them both to a point, to a degree that he will end up walking. He will walk out of the hospital.”

            On Monday afternoon, Cappuccino, an orthopedic spinal surgeon, described Everett’s chances of a complete recovery as “unlikely” and between 5 and 10 percent.

            The next day, however, Green said he had spoken to Cappuccino and described him as “elated.”

            “I think he’s walking on clouds right now,” Green said. “Any physician would be.

            “What he told you yesterday is the case 99 percent of the time. That is that people who are paralyzed stay paralyzed.”

            On Monday, team doctors said Everett, a 25-year-old backup tight end, was paralyzed from the shoulders down and in life-threatening condition after a collision Sunday during a 15-14 loss to the Denver Broncos.

            Everett was injured on the second-half kickoff while attempting what appeared to be a routine tackle of Domenik Hixon. But after striking his helmet on Hixon’s shoulder pads, Everett immediately collapsed. He lay motionless for about 15 minutes.

            The Bills’ team physician, Dr. John Marzo, described Everett as conscious and alert on the field but unable to move his extremities. Everett was immobilized using a back board and taken by ambulance to Millard Fillmore Gates Hospital in Buffalo.

            During the ride, Cappuccino began lowering Everett’s body temperature to protect his brain, spinal cord and other organs.

            At the hospital, Cappuccino operated for four hours Sunday night to repair damage to Everett’s third and fourth cervical vertebrae and spinal cord. Cappuccino said that Everett suffered direct compression of his spinal cord between the C-3 and C-4 vertebrae, but that the spinal cord was not snapped.

            Reached by phone Tuesday night, Cappuccino said he was not permitted by the Bills to comment further.

            Green is the chairman of neurosurgery at the University of Miami. He is also the president of The Miami Project to Cure Paralysis, a foundation he started with the N.F.L. Hall of Fame linebacker Nick Buoniconti, after Buoniconti’s son Marc sustained a spinal cord injury in 1985 while playing football for The Citadel.

            Green is also friends with the Bills’ owner, Ralph Wilson, who has helped support The Miami Project.

            Green said the fact that Cappuccino lowered Everett’s temperature to 92 degrees immediately after the injury made a difference in his recovery.

            The procedure is called moderate hypothermia.

            “It’s like a bruising of an arm, an ice pack will help,” Green said. “The vascular system was the ice pack for Everett’s spinal cord.”

            Dr. Joseph Torg, professor of orthopedics at Temple University, said Tuesday that it was difficult to make generalizations with spinal cord injuries.

            “You want to see improvement in the first 24 to 72 hours if the individual will have a normal recovery,” Torg said. “Every case is unique. You can’t close any doors any way this early.

            “The fact he has some spinal cord function is extremely optimistic.”

            The Bills did not practice Tuesday, and players were unavailable for comment.

            “It’s a dangerous game, and yesterday we saw that and it came right to us,” Bills Coach Dick Jauron said Monday. “It was right in front of us. It was one of our teammates down on the field.”

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            • #7
              The cold saline treatment that they performed on him is/was amazing. It's the first time it's been done and lucky him, it worked - just awesome.....

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              • #8
                So the latest is that he now has movement in three of his fingers.

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