Jump to content

Mancini - Malignant Colon tumor successfully removed (Updated)


weams

Recommended Posts

9 hours ago, Roy Firestone said:

Its been a very hard time lately for sports fans, for America, the world at large... now this. We are all hopeful they were able to catch it early, Remember, both Boog and Eric Davis had it and they are both doing well today. Trey is as nice a young man as I've come across in baseball. He is an excellent talent, and a stellar human being. Heres hoping he gets to play again, but more importantly heres to getting well. We all love you, "Boom Boom:".

I didn't know that about Eric Davis and Boog, so that's good to hear. 

I only hope we can have fans in the seats when Trey's back because the ovation will be something to behold. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

And coincidentally, this is National Colorectal Cancer Awareness Month.

I admit in full ignorance that I used to believe that this was an old people's disease. But Trey's not that much older than I am, and of course I now know that this, like many cancers unfortunately, can strike almost any age. It's one of those diseases that one really needs to be on top of, since it can start out so asymptomatically. 

I can't help but believe he'll come all the way back from this and, in his typical steady, understated way, hit the field and not miss a beat. Can't wait. (Well, actually, I can, but you get what I mean.)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Trey was fortunate enough to be in a situation where physicals were routine and had health care professionals that recognized the problem. Most young people(and many older) don't believe routine physicals are important and don't or can't afford them because of no insurance. I lost two cousins at early ages (26,32) due to colon-rectal cancer. If detected earlier the results would likely have been different. My father had the disease too, hence I get a colonoscopy every 3 years. There is a HUGE genetic link. For all who are so uncomfortable about the procedure, it is no big deal.....the cleansing process is worse than the procedure. Here's hoping Trey has a complete recovery. Here is also a good time to educate the masses on the disease and the need to have routine exams despite one's age.

  • Upvote 3
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Man this news hits WAY too close to home. Last year my cousin went in for a routine colonoscopy (at 50) and found himself in surgery a week later. And he's just now wrapping up chemotherapy. Prior to the procedure he showed no symptoms. 

As I result I decided to get my first colonoscopy at age 45 (some insurance companies will cover it at that age). You can't be too cautious. Wishing Trey a speedy recovery and be sure to get checked folks. Annual physicals, colonoscopies after age 45 or 50, etc. are an absolute must. And the procedure wasn't as nearly as bad as I had imagined so don't let that deter you. I literally felt and remembered nothing. 

This concludes my public service announcement. 

 

  • Upvote 4
Link to comment
Share on other sites

I don’t have a family history of this type of cancer (and other factors of low risk for it), so my primary care physician (UNC Hospitals Healthcare system) gave me the option of the stool tests that I send to their testing lab. I do this every Fall. If they ever find something suspicious, they will then call me in for a colonoscopy and examination. The test is very simple and easily accomplished.  A good buddy of mine lost his wife (she was mid-50s) to this cancer about four years ago. Just about all of my close friends now have one test or the other now. The awareness has grown over the last decade and I’m convinced it’s saving lives. Wishing Trey all the best. Hoping that catching it early will be to his benefit. He will surely be under the watchful eye of his doctors for several years. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

2 hours ago, UpstateNYfan said:

Trey was fortunate enough to be in a situation where physicals were routine and had health care professionals that recognized the problem. Most young people(and many older) don't believe routine physicals are important and don't or can't afford them because of no insurance. I lost two cousins at early ages (26,32) due to colon-rectal cancer. If detected earlier the results would likely have been different. My father had the disease too, hence I get a colonoscopy every 3 years. There is a HUGE genetic link. For all who are so uncomfortable about the procedure, it is no big deal.....the cleansing process is worse than the procedure. Here's hoping Trey has a complete recovery. Here is also a good time to educate the masses on the disease and the need to have routine exams despite one's age.

I’ve taken to renting a room in the closest hotel for the prep. Last time I stayed less than a block from the facility it made the experience much better.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

From Roch:

Elias has spoken with Mancini’s family.

“I think we’re going to have a lot more information on Trey and the outlook and the timeline soon, and we will certainly provide all of that information once it becomes available and fully understood, but I can say that he’s doing really well,” Elias said. “I think his procedure and where he’s at right now is about as positive as possible of his spirits and his physical feeling right now, so we’ll keep our fingers crossed and take this as it comes. But he’s doing really well and the operation went very well.”

https://www.masnsports.com/school-of-roch/2020/03/elias-our-plan-is-to-keep-our-players-and-staff-members-here.html

 

  • Upvote 1
  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

I had a colonoscopy last week and they found a benign polyp which they removed on the spot, before it could change if left in. That its why colonoscopy is so important they can find the benign polyps, at home tests like the ones on TV  only find 42% of benign polyps. A colonoscopy is one of the best preventive measures that exists, so it shouldn't be put off. 

I'm in my 60's so my doctor recommended a colonoscopy but they would not recommend one at age 27 for Trey and I don't think insurance would even cover it.  However maybe the rules should change about that,.

Anyway I will say a prayer for Trey it just doesn't seem fair that he has to deal with this at his age. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

 I pray for Trey the 27 year old young man and pull for a full recovery! I also pray for Trey, the best the Orioles have at this time, and hope for the same. In the total scheme of things, the first is so much more important!!!! Let's  use all the prayer and best wishes  we can to help support Trey and his family through this! 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1 hour ago, OsFanSinceThe80s said:

Thanks for posting this, I didn't seen it until now. 

He looks good! Hope he is.

 

I know there are doctors on here. What is the usual course for him now? Is it just heal from surgery and move on? Chemotherapy? I don't know other possibilities.

This suspension of the season might work in his and the team's and all our favor. Of course his health and welfare is of utmost importance, but if he's ok now... it's scary to think of going into the season without him.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

17 hours ago, scOtt said:

He looks good! Hope he is.

 

I know there are doctors on here. What is the usual course for him now? Is it just heal from surgery and move on? Chemotherapy? I don't know other possibilities.

This suspension of the season might work in his and the team's and all our favor. Of course his health and welfare is of utmost importance, but if he's ok now... it's scary to think of going into the season without him.

You specifically asked for a doctor's opinion--and I am not that. But I do (like others on the board) have significant experience with this through loved ones. 

It's hard to imagine any doctor recommendation at this point for Trey that does NOT include either chemo or radiation or both. And both are absolutely destructive to the human body. If either or both is what's next, it could be a serious while before Trey is back on a baseball field. He's a young man, in shape, otherwise healthy with the best doctors and trainers he could have, so there's always plenty of room for hope. My thoughts and prayers are with him, and that he recovers fully and is back in action soon.

  • Thanks 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.


  • Posts

    • It will be a bitter pill to swallow if we end up a couple games worse than NYY and this tabulator imagines they got 50 net runs of help. Sig Mejdal would probably be only to happy to do some pro bono case preparation on behalf of Rob Manfred and David Rubenstein. I do kind of think if/when robo-umps come, Orioles bats may enjoy a short-term preparedness advantage.
    • Mayo and Basallo are the only non-Boras, non-pitchers who will debut at a young enough age that you’d be buying out free agent years before age 30. As much as I’d like to extend Gunnar, Holliday etc., I think those are the most likely candidates. But they have such big question marks about the defensive value they will provide that it might be pretty hard finding the right number. You don’t want to be paying them as a 3B/C when they end up a 1B/DH. And I also don’t expect to Orioles to do an extension before they get some MLB exposure under their belts. Just this year, the Keith and Rafaela extensions are looking really rough and showing the risks to that approach, and I’m going to assume the Orioles will remain very risk averse to guaranteed money until proven otherwise. 
    • After last night's brutal hose job from Laz Diaz, the Orioles are now last in the league in TotFav.  We've lost almost 8 net runs to umpire mistakes this season.  
    • There are quite a few occasions in MLB history of teams taking the right path and the wrong path. Early contracts have risk but by far greatest reward. Atlanta Braves have locked up most of there stars. Acuna, Olsen, Albies, Riley, Strider, Murphy, Harris. Its cost them money up front but will be massive savings down the road. Acuna on the open market would net 50 million per year for over 14 years. They are paying him 12.5 million per season. There are teams like the Nationals who let Harper, Soto, Turner all walk because of ownership and not early intervention. People were saying it was stupid for Juan Soto to turn down Nats contract. He will get more this offseason for sure. Also the Nats were in that situation because they had talks 1.5 years left on the contract.    Contract order for me would go Gunnar-by far number 1, already comparable deal with Witt Jr. Has to get done, Has to be lifelong Oriole Westburg- Not something crazy but buying out arbitration years something like 7-8 years 80-100 million Bradish-something that pays off arbitration and pays 2-3 years free agency. Burnes- Frontloaded contract where first 4 years are majority of pay. Most of our payroll increase comes in 4 years when Adley hits free agency.    I would continue to monitor Holiday.   Adley is a wait and see. He will be a 30 year old catcher. Have to see how Basallo progresses in next year.
    • Ex-post, the missed third strike on Siani was the most impactful mistake--it put the game out of reach.  I think that UmpireScorecards measure "impact" ex-ante--at the time of the mistake (before the next pitch), which mistake led to a bigger change in the expected number of extra runs scored going forward?  I think Siani was still 1-2 after the mistake, so ex ante it was not likely that he would have a successful at bat even after the blown call.  While I think Gorman was 3-2, so it was more likely that he would have a productive at bat after the blown call.  
    • People have been waiting a month and a half to turn him back into the whipping boy.
    • Before even getting into ballpark dimensions and quality of talent, PCL teams often play at altitude (Reno, Vegas, Salt Lake, El Paso, Albuquerque) and several others are in Texas (Houston, Round Rock) which makes the ball fly. 
  • Popular Contributors

  • Popular Now

×
×
  • Create New...