Odd that your question hasn't received an answer, given that judging from the comments above several people obviously have useful insight to share. Well, comments on Meta are AFAIK rarely if ever purged, but for posterity's sake even so…
Is there anything I can do?
A detailed flag on the question for the moderator is one thing you can try. Especially if the scenario is blatant, where the OP has posted a comment that clearly states that your answer did in fact address their question usefully (e.g. "thanks! your answer worked!" or some such), I would expect a moderator would gladly undelete the question. Just be sure to explain clearly in the flag what happened, including the comment.
Another option, as you've found, is to round up community members and ask them (directly or indirectly) to help by voting to undelete the question. You can do this with a Meta post (as here) or in a relevant chat room, for example.
In either case, IMHO it is important to consider the value of the question. We should not always answer questions, as poorly-written questions are hard for others to find in searches and may confuse those who do find them, even if there are any good answers posted for the question. If you find a poorly-written question that you can answer, and believe it could be useful, then you should edit the question to improve it; ensure that the question is as comprehensible to everyone else as it was to you, if not more so.
Fortunately, all of the above has been done in this case. So your immediate problem was solved before you even received an actual answer to the question. :)
Should I foresee these help vampires?
"Nobody expects the Inqui^H^H^H^H^H Help Vampire!"
Seriously though, no. How could you foresee anything like that, except on a probability basis? Certainly help vampires tend to have the worst questions. Composition is bad, grammar is bad, formatting is bad, code example is bad, etc. But these are just clues. There are badly written questions by well-intentioned and conscientious people, and there are probably even help vampires out there who can put a complete grammatically correct sentence together.
There is nothing you can do in advance to know whether someone is actually going to turn out to be a help vampire. All you can do is assume the best, and not let it get to you if something goes wrong.
(By the way: extrapolating from the first several pages of my answers it looks to me as though roughly 10% of my answers received zero feedback from the OP; no votes up or down, nor an "accept". Now, I grant that at least some of those, maybe I goofed and the OP was too nice to give me an honest downvote when they should have. But I'll bet that at least half of those were genuinely useful answers, for which the OP just ignored.
Frankly, a 5% rate of failure of original posters seems pretty good to me, in the context of the Internet. Just goes to show how Stack Overflow actually does a pretty good job encouraging good behavior :) )