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Valley Fever
Posted: Fri May 22, 2009 8:44 am
by Cowboy Joe
What in the hell is this disease? Conor Jackson's got it. Apparently, a sub .200 BA is one of the symptoms.
Valley Fever
Posted: Fri May 22, 2009 5:43 pm
by Walla Walla
I saw it when I was in the Navy out in the deserts of California. It can be a very nasty thing to get. Its a fungus that travels through the air. It attacks the lungs and can travel throughout the body. It can last for a few weeks or years. Not alot of people get it. But its for real and has nothing to do with baseball or Roids.
It does have something to do with the desert.
Valley Fever
Posted: Sat May 23, 2009 3:06 am
by Cowboy Joe
Interesting. Never heard of it.
I'm sending out a memo to my team to let them know the only fevers they are allowed to contract will be of the spring or boogie varieties. Oh, and if Mr Spock is ever on my team, he can get the blood fever once every 10 years (hey, a man's got to mate).
Valley Fever
Posted: Sat May 23, 2009 6:07 am
by rockitsauce
Originally posted by Walla Walla:
I saw it when I was in the Navy out in the deserts of California. It can be a very nasty thing to get. Its a fungus that travels through the air. It attacks the lungs and can travel throughout the body. It can last for a few weeks or years. Not alot of people get it. But its for real and has nothing to do with baseball or Roids.
It does have something to do with the desert. JC, You are correct sir...to a degree. Valley Fever certainly "does have something to do w/ the desert". However to say that, "not alot of people get it"...well sure across the USA that might be the case, but if you live in the desert (like CoJack) it is like the common cold.
It is certainly (except in very rare cases) nothing life threatening. So CoJack owners worry not. He'll get that ave back up to his normal .300 in no time.
Valley Fever
Posted: Sun May 24, 2009 11:19 pm
by King of Queens
From mlb.com:
Valley Fever is actually Coccidioidomycosis, but got it's [SIC] more well-known name, according to azhealthinfo.org, because it was discovered in California's San Joaquin Valley. It occurs when a pair of spores, which typically reside in soil, are inhaled. It is not an uncommon ailment in Arizona, as it's the fourth most common disease reported to the Arizona Department of Health Services.
Arizona general manager Josh Byrnes said that a timetable for Jackson's return is "unknown" and the recovery time from the illness varies wildly depending on the severity of the infection.
According to the Valley Fever Center for Excellence at the University of Arizona, some people may not show any symptoms, while others may take months or years to recover.