May 1, 2024

Coa released, walks out of hospital

Last updated: 4/14/11 6:19 PM


Eibar Coa provided a sight Thursday afternoon that few could have dreamed
possible after the Gulfstream Park jockey fractured his C-4 vertebra in a racing
spill on February 18 — he walked into a press conference celebrating his
release from Memorial Regional Hospital South.

“In all my years of neurosurgery never have I seen a case, an event, this
impressive and this miraculous. To have a man who’s completely paralyzed from
the neck down — a complete quadriplegic — and then be able to get up and walk
is an extremely rare event,” said Dr. Scott Berta, the Memorial neurosurgeon who
performed two surgeries to stabilize and repair Coa’s injury. “And do to it so
quickly on top of it is pretty much unheard of.”

Coa, whose stride was remarkably fluid as he walked to the podium, impressed
his doctors with his positive attitude, but he admitted there were times when he
had doubts that he would be able to walk out of the hospital.

“I’m super happy. When I came to this hospital, for sure I had the hope to
walk out, but I wasn’t sure I was going to. I knew I was going to work hard to
do it,” said Coa, whose wife, Rebeca, waited nearby to take her husband home
less than two months after his horrific accident. “Just walking out and seeing
all my family and support from the doctors makes me happy. I’m a happy guy
today, for sure.”

The 40-year-old native of Monagas, Venezuela, instilled confidence in his
doctors that his case might be special.

“I think the credit for his miracle that occurred goes to the man himself,”
said Berta, noting that the speedy action taken at Memorial Hospital following
the accident was pivotal in his recovery. “When I first met him, I just felt
something special about him. His attitude was so positive that he was going to
work through it, I could tell (that he would make an amazing recovery).”

Dr. Allan Novick was also impressed with Coa’s attitude and work ethic during
his on-going rehabilitation.

“He had a positive attitude. We just gave him the tools that it takes to work
through this and continue to develop the strength sufficiently, first to move in
bed, then to stand and progress ultimately to walking and caring for himself,”
said Novick, director of Rehabilitation Services, Memorial Healthcare System.
“With the combination of having the right attitude and the right tools, he was
able to overcome.”

Coa, who has ridden 4,080 winners, said he and his doctors couldn’t have
achieved the miraculous recovery without the support of his family and people in
the racing industry.

“A lot of people involved in racing from every state, jockeys, trainers,
owners and fans. Every single part of racing was supporting me and praying for
me, and I believe that was one of the reasons why I here today.

“All the prayers from all those people and all their support pushed me to
work harder and be here today.”

Coa will continue out-patient rehabilitation with the ultimate goal of riding
again.

“That door is not closed, but I’m going to work hard to get full recovery
first,” Coa said. “That door is still open, but I couldn’t know the answer
today. But it’s one of my goals, for sure.”

If Coa never rides again, he will always be an inspiration to his doctors, as
well as other people with spinal chord injuries.

“Eibar had a C-4 fracture dislocation that was extremely severe. It was a
severe spinal chord injury. We actually term it a complete spinal chord injury.
 He was a complete quadriplegic,” Berta explained. “His MRI indicated that it
was severely traumatized and that he may never walk again. That’s typically what
we see in these situations where people have such a high-energy trauma and they
result in a fracture dislocation. The imaging portends a very poor prognosis.
And typically when people can’t move anything at all and they’re a complete
quadriplegic, they barely regain any function at all.”

Having made such a miraculous recovery, Coa walked out of Memorial Hospital a
new man.

“I appreciate life more than ever. I really believe that I was born again
after February 18,” he said. “So now I have two birthdays.”