The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Doctor, Michael Vick team up during Super Bowl week

- Your daily roundup of celeb news and chatter By Jennifer Brett jbrett@ajc.com By Jennifer Brett jbrett@ajc.com

Early in HOUSTON — Super Bowl week, as the dazzling fan plaza and NFL Experience destinatio­n downtown were starting to get cranking and the Falcons’ heartbreak was still days away, a low-key, medically themed news conference with just a relative handful in attendance began with a newsflash.

In walked former Atlanta Falcons quarterbac­k Michael Vick.

Old No. 7 (whose Atlanta jersey we spotted here and there in the crowds throughout the week) coincident­ally had just posted an open letter to Atlanta on the Players’ Tribune website. In our quick interview, Vick talked about his gratitude toward Atlanta, the Falcons and the fans and the rousing ovation he’d received earlier this year when he visited the Georgia Dome during the team’s final regularsea­son game.

“It was one of the best feelings,” he said. “It started the year off right for me.”

Shortly thereafter, Vick took a seat, as a member of a panel discussing a new non-opiate pain therapy called ProIV Chronic Pain DripFusion. Dr. Kevin Jackson of Chicago, a member of the American Associatio­n of Neurologic­al Surgeons and Congress of Neurologic­al Surgeons, is heading up Pro-IV’s chronic pain study along with nine partner physicians across the country, including Dr. Mark

Beaty of Atlanta. “We truly are on the cusp of being able to significan­tly advance our ability to practice medicine safely in the United States,” Beaty said. “We’re very excited. The evidence I’ve seen so far has been very encouragin­g.”

Backers hope the procedure, which involves an infusion of anti-opiate, anti-steroid micronutri­ents to treat inflammati­on working in conjunctio­n with pain medication, will gain support among the profession­al sports community and beyond. Joining Vick, who has used the procedure for pain management, were U.S. Army Sgt. 1st Class Michael Smith, who returned to active duty after losing his arm in a 2011 traffic accident, and Sara White, widow of NFL player Reggie White. She has multiple sclerosis and has also suffered the earlier effects of a tennis injury.

“When you get hurt, the American military gives you pain meds,” Smith said. “You get used to it. You’re numb to everything. I was taking Oxycontin on top of morphine on top of Dilaudid. Two years after my injury, 22 surgeries later, I went to sleep one night without taking my pain medication­s. When I woke up, I thought I was dying. It was a tough battle to get off of them.”

White talked about her battle with pain medication, too.

“I was an addict,” she said. “I was addicted to being pain-free.”

Vick, who has indicated his playing days are over, called the procedure promising.

“If this was introduced to me three or four years ago, then maybe I’d be playing,” he said. “That’s not the case, but I can have an impact moving forward. There were a ton of injuries over the course of my career. Those are lingering injuries I still have to deal with to this day, in terms of pain. I felt really compelled to want to be a part of this process in helping athletes, past and present, understand what’s at stake in terms of health.”

Beaty, who noted a close connection between chronic inflammati­on and chronic disease, said his office has performed the ProIV treatment several hundred times and is encouraged by the early results.

“We’re still in the process of data collection,” he said. “Anecdotall­y, the overwhelmi­ng majority of people we’ve treated have had a positive response.”

 ?? JENNIFER BRETT / JBRETT@AJC.COM ?? U.S. Army Sgt. 1st Class Michael Smith (from left), Dr. Mark Beaty, Sara White and Michael Vick.
JENNIFER BRETT / JBRETT@AJC.COM U.S. Army Sgt. 1st Class Michael Smith (from left), Dr. Mark Beaty, Sara White and Michael Vick.
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