Maggie Meier couldn’t feel pain, she couldn’t interact with people, she couldn’t eat, she couldn’t turn over in bed without help and she certainly couldn’t walk.
But for brief periods, the 14-year-old basketball star from Blue Valley Northwest High School in Overland Park, Kan., would awake from her coma and pass a ball in her hospital room with perfect form.
“She was very severely ill,” neurologist Dr. William Graf, who treated Meier in 2008-2009 at a Kansas City hospital, told msnbc.com Friday. “The depth of her coma is not in question. The way she woke up from it is highly unique.”
Maggie’s shooting skills while comatose, and her remarkable recovery, have attracted international attention ever since she and her family went public a couple of weeks ago in the Kansas City Star.
Graf, professor of neurology and pediatrics at Yale, figures that shooting a basketball must have been hardwired into a part of Maggie’s brain that remained relatively unscathed from illness sparked by a respiratory infection.
“This was a wiped-out memory bank,” he says, “but one thing that wasn’t wiped out was her ability to shoot with perfect form.”
From third grade on, “she probably shot 500 times a day,” he says, emphasizing, “this girl was a star athlete. It needs to be clear that she was super, to the point of being on a national championship team.”
Meier's case was a first for Graf -- and while it might be possible for a comatose concert pianist to be able to play a keyboard before recovering any other ability -- it’s unclear “why someone would have a certain function come back faster than another,” he says.
A high school freshman, Maggie had just lettered in varsity volleyball and was scheduled to play on the school basketball team when she became ill in November 2008. She’d been complaining of a bad headache and then started having nonstop seizures.
It took Graf and his colleagues a few weeks to figure out what was making Maggie so sick. She had a rare brain infection called mycoplasma meningoencephalitis. It's not known how she contracted the illness.
Graf remembered a patient he’d seen in the mid-1990s who had the same infection. That boy went on to make a full recovery. He shared the story with Maggie’s parents, with whom he’d bonded over their shared love of girls’ basketball. Graf has a daughter who plays college basketball.
“This is a bad illness,” Graf told them. “We need to support her through this. You’re going to have to be very patient.” After she’d been in a coma for two months, though, Graf says, even he was starting to get cold feet.
Maggie spent 100 days in the hospital, her mother Margaret, a nurse, by her side the entire time, Graf says. After coming out of the coma, she spent eight months learning how to walk and read again. “When I saw her five months out, I was thinking we’re looking at moderate disability here.” She was still drooling, and the former honors student could barely read a Dr. Seuss book. “I thought she’d need a lot of special education.”
But Maggie surpassed everyone’s expectations. “This girl is a fighter. And, like a little kid, she reprogrammed her brain.”
Although she missed her freshman year, her teachers helped Maggie regain her reading ability and is graduating with her class this year. She’ll attend college in the fall. Her best physical therapy, Graf says, has been her return to the basketball court and participation on the varsity team.
Says Graf, “If you’re an optimist, the cup is 90 percent, 95 percent full here.”
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Pray that God-speed recovery be with her.
Wow, fantastic news and a good story for a change. I hate all the doom and gloom from the news media.
This is a true miracle!!!! What God has done and what these people have done with the free will given to them is truly a gift!!!!
any idea why god was such a prick as to let her get sick in the first place?
isn't it amazing that your god-given miracle is identical to what happens when medical professionals, with years of training and dedication, lead to exactly the same result?
if this is a god-given miracle, why does god hate amputees? does god say, "i'm sorry you lost your legs, but I'm busy helping that girl over there take four years to mostly kind of recover from an infection so guy1118 thinks that this is a miracle"?
Ni: Why do you be such a Troll, mate?
You should pay closer attention to Ni's point, TR. He's no less vocal about his views than GUY preaching about God. Both offend.
An amazing recovery.
I hope her parents had good medical insurance. If that happened to my child, we would be rendered utterly bankrupt.
Unfortunately, even with the best private health insurance, a family could still go bankrupt over what the insurance doesn't cover.
That is very true, however, it's very likely if they have certain costs the community would probably come together and do some sort of fund raiser to help out, especially after the story went public. I've seen things like that in the area I live with students whom have cancer. Hopefully in the future, after cases like this are made public, other doctors will be able to diagnose these diseases sooner and come up with more efficient and less expensive treatments.
Wishing you the best Maggie...;)
Yer Pal Always,
Thee
What a nice story for a change. Good luck Maggie
Amazing what the body and brain can do on it's own without any other intervention...from anywhere...just more proof that doctors still don't have a clue about anything more complex than a broken bone. I hope she has a long a full life after all this.
Nowhere does the article say that the patient recovered without intervention. Though her treatment isn't discussed specifically, it's a certainty that she is alive because she received antibiotic therapy as well as extensive supportive care to combat/prevent complications throughout her long ordeal. Since you believe doctors have nothing to offer beyond setting broken bones, I'll assume that you won't be checking into a hospital when you have cancer or a heart attack some day. Might as well just stay home and see what your body "can do on it's (sic) own without any other intervention... from anywhere."
Jane's right. These infections don't clear up on their own, and she never would have survived all that time in a coma without care. Even if she hadn't starved/thirsted to death, bedsores can cause deadly infections, too. Not to mention all the therapy she's probably gotten to help her recover.
People who talk flippantly about the ineffectiveness of modern medicine clearly have no idea of what life was like before we had it.
I knew a girl in high school who came down with this type of infection. She was a great artist and just the nicest kid you ever met. She got very sick and stopped coming to school suddenly. Once we learned what had happened from a friend of the family, our club got together and donated the money to buy her a club t-shirt--with the logo she drew for us. It was a small gift, but it came from all of us.
I see her around sometimes (this happened about 10 years ago). She still has trouble walking and talking, and I think she probably requires constant care because her mother is always with her. But I'm glad that she survived and is still able to experience the world.