Alison’s Story: Ruptured Aneurysm following Neurotrauma

Step by hard-earned step, word by remembered word, Dr. Alison Delgado has recovered from a bicycle accident that nearly robbed her of her life. Dr. Delgado, who suffered serious physical and neurological injuries in the 2010 accident, is today a pediatrician in Park City, Utah.

Physicians at the UC Neuroscience Institute helped her through a series of procedures and treatments, while her husband, Dr. Tim Delgado, has been her No. 1 cheerleader and coach. Her story of love and survival attracted a groundswell of media attention, generating coverage from CNN, ESPN, The Today Show, USA Today and the Cincinnati Enquirer.

Alison Delgado was being stabilized at a community hospital following the cycling accident on Oct. 17, 2010, when Tim, an emergency department resident at the University of Cincinnati Medical Center, arrived via Air Care. Tim was to provide assistance to a “Jane Doe cyclist in her 20s” during her transport to the Medical Center’s trauma center. When Tim realized that the accident victim was his wife, a second helicopter and physician were summoned.

Alison Delgado, who was wearing a bicycle helmet, did not suffer the kind of traumatic brain injury normally seen in bicycle accidents. Although she suffered numerous fractures to her neck and body, her skull was intact. Inside her brain, however, the impact created significant problems. It caused a blood vessel to tear and spill blood into the space around her brain, a subarachnoid hemorrhage. Further, the injury either led to the development of a dangerous aneurysm – a bulge in the blood vessel wall — or aggravated an existing aneurysm. The discovery of a second aneurysm on the other side of her brain, observed one of her physicians, suggested that an underlying physical condition had elevated her risk of developing aneurysms.

During a series of procedures, UCNI’s neurosurgical specialists worked to treat the aneurysm. They tried filling the aneurysm with tiny coils to keep blood from entering, and they tried to bolster the damaged artery with a flexible, mesh stent.

The artery feeding the aneurysm was fragile, however, and the aneurysm continued growing. It ruptured a second time, on November 21, four days after Alison had returned home from her rehabilitation at Daniel Drake Center for Post-Acute Care. Once again her husband, Tim, was called to action, only a month after her initial injury.

During her second period of hospitalization, Alison Delgado suffered episodes of vasospasm. The phenomenon occurs when irritating blood byproducts cause the walls of an artery to contract and narrow, reducing blood flow to the brain. During those periods, as Allison experienced stroke-like symptoms and was unable to talk, specialists in the Neuroscience Intensive Care Unit worked to keep her blood pressure up and to keep blood flowing through the constricted artery.

Mario Zuccarello, MD, Chairman of the Department of Neurosurgery and a renowned cerebrovascular surgeon, finally neutralized the aneurysm. He rerouted the blood flow around the damaged artery in a delicate procedure known as an intracranial-extracranial bypass and then shut off blood flow to the aneurysm once and for all with a clip. (He clipped the second aneurysm in early March.)

The worst behind her, Alison was able to focus on rehabilitation and recovery. She progressed rapidly from her lowest point, when she had trouble remembering Tim’s name. They played Uno, Life and Scattergories. Using an iPad, Tim showed her photos and prompted her to search her memory for the words to describe them. Certain words, including “helicopter,” proved elusive at first. Tim also encouraged her to play the video game “Harbor Master,” which hones multitasking skills.

Recovery also meant daily workouts at the gym, with work on the elliptical, weight lifting, and plyometrics to improve her balance. At first Alison had to hold Tim’s hand to do lunges; eventually she could do them with weights.

Reading came slowly at first, then more and more quickly. Sometimes Alison would have trouble finding the words she wanted to say, but her improvement and determination never ceased. Her speech therapist asked her to read a medical article and then write about it. She began attending rounds at Cincinnati Children’s and, by February 2011, only four months after her initial injury, she had presented two cases at bedside rounds. “Everyone has been great and supportive,” Alison said then.

Alison, who had finished first among women in the 2005 Flying Pig Marathon, was eager to run again. But Dr. Zuccarello kept her sidelined until he had clipped the second aneurysm and she had recovered from that surgery.  Tim kept her motivated, and on May 1 she made a triumphant comeback with a third-place finish in the Flying Pig 5k. “We are focused on one goal: getting her back to work and to where she feels normal,” Tim said. “She will feel normal when she gets back to work.”And Tim is keeping her motivated. “We are focused on one goal: getting her back to work and to where she feels normal,” Tim said. “She will feel normal when she gets back to work.”

Dr. Zuccarello wouldn’t let Alison run again until after she had recovered from the surgical clipping of the second aneurysm, which he performed in early March 2011. But Tim was keeping her motivated. “We are focused on one goal: getting her back to work and to where she feels normal,” Tim said. “She will feel normal when she gets back to work.”

Finally, in April, Alison began working part-time. In May she was back full-time.

“I have been back at full speed over the past year,” she said in March 2012. “I’m always asking for feedback from my attendings to make sure my performance is the way it should be, and everyone has given me good feedback. Over the past year I actually wrote a case report with two of the emergency department attendings, and we have submitted it to the journal Pediatrics.”

Alison had to make up extra time in residency but finished in December 2012. On May 6, she capped her recovery by running the Flying Pig Marathon and placing fourth among women.

And then there are those mountains. There are 54 peaks in Colorado over 14,000 feet, Tim noted. “She wants to get the last 52.”

–Cindy Starr

* * *

Hope Story Disclaimer – This story describes an individual patient’s experience. Because every person is unique, individual patients may respond to treatment in different ways. Outcomes are influenced by many factors and may vary from patient to patient.

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