Former Raiders, Gators LB Neiron Ball in coma with brain aneurysm years after harrowing trauma at Florida
The Oakland Raiders delivered difficult news Tuesday that former linebacker Neiron Ball is in a medically induced coma after suffering a brain aneurysm on September 16.
The 26-year-old started two games for the Raiders as a rookie in 2015, a remarkable accomplishment after he survived a harrowing ordeal battling a rare brain condition called arteriovenous malformation (AVM) while playing at the University of Florida.
Foundation: Neiron Ball suffered burst brain aneurysm
The Aneurysm and AVM Foundation spoke with Ball’s family on Tuesday and released a statement on Twitter regarding his condition.
UPDATE: Upon speaking with @neiron_11's family, we've learned that he's been in a medically-induced coma since the 16th. We believed Neiron's #AVM was obliterated, that doesn't seem to be the case as he developed an aneurysm which burst. His family asks for continued prayers pic.twitter.com/wbSDXrew5x
— TAAF (@TAAF) September 25, 2018
Ball had beat condition while attending Florida
Ball’s brain condition first surfaced at Florida in 2011 during a football workout. What started as a dull pain in his lower neck led to Ball being hooked up to a morphine drip in the hospital where the pain was so intense, he couldn’t tolerate light. Ball’s brother-in-law Dary Myricks described the scene to Yahoo Sports’ Eric Adelson.
“When I saw him, he was in so much pain,” Myricks said. “I knew they’d have tubes and medicine, but he was literally screaming when we walked in.”
Doctors discovered bleeding on his brain and eventually diagnosed him with AVM, a condition where the brain’s blood vessels get tangled and rupture.
Ball underwent intense radiation procedure
Ball eventually underwent a medical procedure to radiate the vessel, intended to create scarring that would cause the tangle vessel to clot.
From Adelson’s report:
Finally, Ball returned to Gainesville for surgery. He had a brace attached to his head, cinched into place with four screws. He was given some dye to drink, then was put into a huge radiation chamber while surgeons tried to clot the AVM and stop the bleeding. All Ball could think as he entered the machine was, “I hope this works.”
It did work, but how well? The pain finally subsided, but Ball underwent months of MRIs to make sure the lesion caused by the radiation kept the vessels from bursting again.
Ball recovered to play football again
Cleared by doctors, Ball went on to a stunning recovery that saw him return to the football field with the Gators and eventually become a fifth-round draft pick by the Raiders in 2015.
While in Oakland, Ball befriended a 10-year-old Raiders fan who had also suffered AVM, a condition believed to affect 300,000 Americans.
A knee injury, not his brain condition, eventually cut Ball’s Raiders’ career short.
Raiders reach out to fanbase
The Raiders asked for the support of their fanbase as Ball is again unexpectedly dealing with the condition that he thought he had beaten.
“The Raiders ask that Neiron Ball and his family are kept in the thoughts and prayers of the Raider Nation during this difficult time.”
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