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Jack Crowe felt a little something in his neck. When symptoms of a chest cold followed, Crowe and his wife left their cabin in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula and started driving home to Chicago.
Was it COVID-19? Crowe made a telehealth appointment with Rush University Medical Center to find out. Still far from home, Crowe told an ABC News affiliate, he was connected to a virtual care provider in five minutes.
That provider, nurse practitioner Nicole Marks, told the ABC affiliate that Crowe’s chest pain and shortness of breath were “red flags.” Crowe needed to be seen by a doctor immediately. Taking Marks’ advice, Crowe sought emergency care at a Wisconsin hospital. There, he was diagnosed with aortic dissection, a rare and serious condition of a tear in the main artery that carries blood from the heart.
The Summit High School boys lacrosse team practices at the Summit High School indoor field on Tuesday, May 4, 2021 in Breckenridge. The team lost to Vail Mountain School 9-1 in its first game of the season on Thursday, May 6.
Photo by Joel Wexler / Rocky Mountain.Photography
The Summit High School varsity boys lacrosse team lost their season opener 9-1 on the road Thursday, May 6 at Vail Mountain School.
In the Tigers’ first game in two years, junior attackman Graham Kalaf was the lone goal scorer on the day. Kalaf’s unassisted goal came early in a competitive first period that ended 3-1 in favor of Vail Mountain School before they pulled away in the second and third periods.
Photo by Joel Wexler / Rocky Mountain.Photography
Summit High School varsity boys lacrosse coach Matty Marks is used to prom coming near the end of the season, not five days before the season-opener.
Such is the situation for an atypical 10-game boys lacrosse season that will stretch beyond Summit High School’s graduation. Thursday’s Summit season-opener at Vail Mountain School comes a month later than the typical start date for spring sports like lacrosse in Colorado. Lacrosse is one of several sports to have its season condensed and pushed back as part of the Colorado High School Activities Association’s four-season calendar in response to the pandemic.
Snyman to undergo minor procedure after setback in recovery from knee injury
Munster say the fresh knee injury is unrelated to Snyman’s ACL, which he injured just seven minutes into his debut over eight months ago. By Gavan Casey Tuesday 4 May 2021, 11:53 AM 4 hours ago 6,563 Views 10 Comments
Image: Dan Sheridan/INPHO
Image: Dan Sheridan/INPHO
MUNSTER HAVE CLOSE enough to a clean bill of health ahead of Friday night’s Guinness Pro14 Rainbow Cup visit of Ulster to Thomond Park (8:15pm), but lock RG Snyman has suffered a setback during the late stages of his rehab from a knee injury and will undergo a ‘minor procedure’ for an ‘unrelated injury’ to his knee, say the southern province.
4th May 2021 By The Editor
RG Snyman at training last year. Inpho
The Munster squad are continuing their preparations at the HPC ahead of Friday night’s Guinness PRO14 Rainbow Cup clash against Ulster at Thomond Park (8.15pm).
The Munster squad are continuing their preparations at the HPC ahead of Friday night’s Guinness PRO14 Rainbow Cup clash against Ulster at Thomond Park (8.15pm).
See what’s coming up this week at Munster Rugby
On the injury front, there is unfortunate news for RG Snyman as he suffered a setback during the last block of his rehabilitation.
He will see a knee specialist this week and will undergo a minor procedure on his knee after suffering an unrelated injury. This will delay his return to training for a number of weeks.