Charlie’s Story

Site created on June 28, 2020

On June 1st, Charlie was involved in a devastating motorcycle accident on his beloved dualsport. He endured over 40 hours of surgery during the first two weeks while in trauma ICU and more than a dozen more hours of operations in the subsequent weeks. The medical staff worked diligently to save his life, his severely injured right leg, and monitor his brain bleeds. They set his compound humerus break, set mesh in his face from 7 fractures and a collapsing orbital socket (he was wearing a full-face helmet - the impact of the vehicle and the ground was just that hard), and took skin from many sites on his body to graft onto other sites of severe road rash and burns. Some of his tattoos have even been displaced! Through it all, Charlie has been incredibly brave, exceeded doctor's expectations turn-after-turn, and managed to reach out to friends and family through a delirium-ridden Traumatic Brain Injury. Those friends and family wait with bated breath for the next pronouncement of his stability, his prognosis, and the possibilities of what his recovery path will look like for years to come.

Charlie is a skilled 3D animator, passionate outdoors enthusiast, and talented dirt bike, skateboard, and snowboard rider. His life philosophy is to enjoy being a kid for as long as he can, even though he is 33-years-old. He embraces the world with childlike wonder and enjoys adventures beside his girlfriend, family, Siberian Husky, and Calico Cat. He always offers his hands and varied expertise to those in need. While we don't fully know what his recovery path looks like at this time, we do know it will involve a shifting paradigm for what is possible due to his indomitable strength. The journey will be bolstered with the support of friends and family (and strangers from communities all over the world) who are sending warm wishes, good vibes, and strength to Charlie as he weathers this storm. It will not be an easy healing process, for his body (with titanium rods and plates in his femur, tibia, knee, and humerus), his brain (TBI recovery), and his soul, but he is forged with deep ferocity and determination to meet his daily and long-term goals. 

You're welcome to follow along his journey -- and thank you so much to those who already have. 

** The first journal entries on this site do include the Update History that Charlie's friends and family were conducting through his GoFundMe, if you'd like to catch up or reference the first month of Charlie's journey after the accident. Thank you. **

Charlie also has a  KudoBoard if you would like to add a picture, .gif, or video to brighten his day! Thank you! https://www.kudoboard.com/boards/KxANMDXU

Newest Update

Journal entry by Angel Allen

Charlie’s brain surgery was a success! 

The very skilled surgeons were able to patch the two holes in his skull using the endoscopic endonasal approach. So far, so good: he has not sprung any leaks or drainage through his nose or ears and has no salty taste down the back of his throat. He still has 6 weeks of restrictions where he is not allowed to lift more than 10 lbs., is only allowed to bend in certain ways, is not permitted to exert pressure in his head, cannot drink through a straw, and must do saline irrigations in his nose. But he is home!

We are so thrilled that the surgery appears to have worked! The patches were made up of tissue the surgeon used from inside his nose, artificial tissue, and biomedical packing glue that will melt away over the next two months. The brain that was “hanging into his nose” was cut away, which sounds scary, but it was “non-viable” at the point of impact during the accident. It was too traumatized for any type of recovery. The changes of smell and taste that he has had since the accident will be what he always has now. They have not gotten significantly worse, which was one of the risks with this surgery. 

The only option if he does leak from this surgery is to do the craniotomy approach through the top of the skull in order to repair the holes from that direction. 

Charlie was in the hospital for a week. They were draining cerebrospinal fluid from around his brain for most of that time. They took about 2000 ml of that fluid with an aggressive approach of 20 ml an hour (which is about 20% of what you have in your brain at any time). This was to alleviate pressure on the patches in hopes it would give the best chance for a seal. He had a very bad headache and was nauseous during this time, as could be expected, but is since feeling quite a bit better with the lumbar tap removed and being home in his own, more comfortable bed. 

He also had one of the metal plates in his right cheek removed that had not been flush with his repaired bone. The plate had been bothering him when he wore glasses/goggles or slept on that side. It was painful. It is amazing that thin strips of metal and 6 Phillips head screws were bolstering up his cheek from collapsing shortly after the accident! There are still other plates on both sides of his face.

The next step for Charlie is at least two upcoming surgeries, the first of which will likely be in June, on his right leg. Right now, he only has 35 degrees of bend in his knee. This is due to scar tissue in the knee and excess bone growth in his hip and quadriceps. The surgeries in June will be much more high risk with transfusions and significant stress to his body as they take out those bones while forcibly moving his knee. He is looking forward to the surgeries as an opportunity to be able to walk better, hopefully be able to run again someday, and maybe even enjoy the extreme sports he has always loved. One of the issues that may not be overcome is a wedge of bone missing from his tibia that may make him less structurally sound for weight distribution on that leg… But there is still a lot we don’t know about how much he will be able to do. We have all seen the sheer magnitude of his will and ferocity. 

Thank you so much for your love and support. Charlie is cherished by so many and it helps him and his family to know how much you all care.

Warmest regards, 

Charlie and Angel

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