DOCTORS have successfully reattached a woman’s head after her skull became detached from her spine while playing football.
Megan King revealed how she was left “internally decapitaded” after she fell to the ground while playing football in 2005.
Ms King, who was just 16 at the time, said the fall severely damaged her spine and tore off her shoulder muscles.
She had to go through more than 30 surgeries and was forced to spend more than a year on crutches.
However, over the years, her injuries got worse,
She said her bone joints became weak, and her muscles began to tear apart, leaving her in unbearable pain.
Doctors were left baffled by her medical condition as to why she was not able to heal.
Finally in 2015 – a decade after her disastrous fall – medical experts were able to diagnose her with hypermobile Ehler ‘s-Danlos syndrome (hEDS).
It is a rare genetic disorder that stops the formation of collagen, which works as major tissue holding the bones together – in her body.
In 2016, Ms King’s neck was fitted with a halo brace – a metal device that is directly screwed into her skull – to keep her head uprght.
However, her skull almost got internally detached from her spine while doctors were attempting to remove the device.
The rare condition is called Atlanto-occipital dislocation (AOD) – or internal decapitation in non-medical terms.
Ms King, who is now 35, told DailyMail: “I flew my chair back to keep gravity from decapitating me.
“My neurosurgeon had to hold my skull in place with his hands. I couldn’t stand. My right side was shaking uncontrollably.”
Doctors rushed to conduct an emergency surgery to fuse her skull back to her spine and save her life.
Source: https://www.the-sun.com/health/14012286/doctors-reattach-woman-head/