Fridge recovering just fine

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COLUMBIA, S.C. – Michael Dean Perry knows the day is coming when his good-natured, gap-toothed older brother nicknamed “The Fridge” will be back to his old, affable self.

But that will take some time and William Perry understands that, Michael Dean said. William, the former NFL defensive lineman famous for his smile and 360-pound size, spent more than a month at Aiken Regional Medical Center this spring, suffering from Guillain-Barre syndrome, a disease where the body’s immune system attacks its peripheral nerves.

Now each day Michael Dean visits William at the North Carolina rehab center – sometimes to encourage him and sometimes to participate in his lengthy recovery.

“Baby steps I call them,” he said Wednesday, adding that William still was not up to granting interviews. “But we can see improvement.”

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Web site, Guillain-Barre syndrome causes “...the loss of reflexes ... and paralysis of respiratory muscles also can occur. A small proportion of patients die, and 20 percent of hospitalized patients can have prolonged disability.”

The National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke says on its Web site that there’s no known cure for Guillain-Barre.

Perry’s Chicago Bears coach, Mike Ditka, saw something wrong in February when his former lineman showed up for an autograph session at Rosemont, Ill. Perry needed a wheelchair to get around and was 150 pounds lighter than when Ditka last saw him, said Ken Valdiserri, the Bears spokesman during Perry’s time in Chicago and now president of the Gridiron Greats Assistance Fund.

Perry “did not look very good,” Valdiserri said.

Charlie Timmerman, Perry’s friend from Aiken, says Perry had been hospitalized before. This time, though, doctors thought it was much more serious.

In April, one of Perry’s brothers, Daryl, stopped in to check on him and found his famous sibling weak and dehydrated. William was listed in serious condition when he was taken to the hospital, where he remained.

Michael Dean says his brother, always outgoing and friendly, was reticent to complain or ask for help. As a former athlete, Michael Dean said it’s difficult to give in to the idea you are no longer invincible and perhaps that’s what kept the 46-year-old William from seeking treatment sooner.

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