Doctor says Teofimo Lopez is 'lucky he's not dead' after boxer found to have fought with air in chest

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Doctor says Teofimo Lopez is 'lucky he's not dead' after boxer found to have fought with air in chest
  • Dec 3, 2021 9:50 AM CT
    • Mark KriegelESPN
Teofimo Lopez was risking his life and should have been in a hospital -- rather than a boxing ring -- when he lost his four lightweight belts to George Kambosos last week at Madison Square Garden, according to a doctor who subsequently examined him and reviewed his medical records.
"He could have died, for sure," said Dr. Linda Dahl, an otolaryngologist (ENT) with surgical privileges at three Manhattan hospitals, told ESPN. "How he breathed, I can't even explain to you. It's like somebody tied a 300-pound set of weights around his chest ... like his neck and chest were in a vise.

"That's how he fought."
"He's lucky he's not dead," Dr. Peter Constantino, executive director of the New York Head and Neck Institute, told ESPN. "I mean, really lucky."

According to Lopez's medical records, the 24-year-old former undisputed champion was diagnosed with "pneumomediastinum" with "extensive air in the retropharyngeal space" by emergency room doctors during his postfight visit to Bellevue Hospital.

"The air was surrounding his chest wall and his heart and his neck -- places where air is not supposed to be," said Dahl, who worked as a ringside physician for the New York State Athletic Commission. "If he was hit in the neck or the chest -- a certain way, in a certain place -- he could have developed a pneumothorax [collapsed lung]. ... He would have instantly been down and unable to breathe and needing a chest tube."
"He's lucky he's not dead. I mean, really lucky."Dr. Peter Constantino, executive director of the New York Head and Neck Institute
The likely cause of the air, according to Dahl and records of physicians who saw Lopez later at New York-Presbyterian Hospital, was a small tear in his esophagus. Lopez -- whose diagnosis was complicated by his longtime asthma and a case of COVID he contracted in June -- began experiencing shortness of breath and swelling in the neck area on Friday, shortly before the weigh-in.

"I thought it was just my asthma," Lopez told ESPN, when asked why he didn't divulge his symptoms to his manager or the athletic commission during his prefight examination on Friday. "I fought through asthma before. If I told everybody, they would've canceled the fight. But I chose not to, because of the amount of pressure I was under. I didn't want to hear people say, 'Oh, another postponement.'"

Lopez-Kambosos, ordered as a mandatory defense by the IBF, was a star-crossed promotion from the beginning, with at least eight dates going back to May. What's more, Kambosos was not seen as a dangerous opponent. DraftKings had Lopez -- who cracked boxing's pound-for-pound lists with his 2020 win over Vasiliy Lomachenko -- as a 10-1 favorite.

Dahl, who worked for the NYSAC between 2004 and 2008, said Lopez's condition wouldn't have become apparent in the routine prefight exam, conducted right before last Friday's weigh-in.
"If you listen with your stethoscope -- as I did on Monday -- his lungs sounded fine," she said. "There's no way anybody could have diagnosed this without knowing how severe his symptoms were, then an X-ray and a CAT scan."

After the weigh-in, Lopez and his team -- minus his customary nutritionists, Perfecting Athletes -- went to the restaurant Carmine's to rehydrate and replenish. That's where his symptoms took a marked turn for the worse.
"It didn't get bad until I started rehydrating," Lopez said.
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His throat and neck became swollen. His chest felt increasingly tight, and his breathing became labored. Again, he said, "I thought it was just my asthma. I been having asthma since I was 6 years old."

The likeliest explanation, according to Constantino -- familiar with both Dahl and the broad facts of the case -- is that Lopez "fast-stretched his esophagus until the point where he got a tear or something like that."
Lopez's parents -- including his outspoken father-trainer, Teofimo Sr. -- said they figured he might be suffering from acid reflux or dehydration from the weight cut.
"I took a seat in the back of the restaurant, by the kitchen," Lopez recalled. "Everybody's trying to burp me and relax me. They see my neck is swollen. My voice changed. At this point, everybody's a little concerned. I think my dad told me I should go to the hospital and I said 'no' because they're going to end up probably canceling the fight."

After returning to the hotel, they tried a variety of prospective remedies: Gatorade, hot tea, club soda, Pepcid, Tums and hot towels. Nothing worked.
By Saturday morning, Lopez said: "My neck is sore. My chest is sore. My throat is hurting. And I'm like, 'I guess I'm just going to have to fight like this.'" Kambosos knocked him down in the first round.
It marked the first time Lopez -- an overwhelming choice as 2020's Fighter of the Year -- was put on the canvas in his five-year pro career.
"That was not me in there Saturday night," Lopez said.

Despite the knockdown Lopez scored in the 10th round, and his postfight protestations that the judges robbed him, the fight was widely viewed as a clear win for Kambosos. The only scorecard raising eyebrows in boxing circles was judge Don Trella's, who had the fight 114-113 for Lopez.

After the fight, Lopez was given oxygen and directed by an athletic commission doctor to Bellevue, where he received nine stitches for a cut above his left eye. At 4:37 am, a CT scan mentioning "extensive air" in his neck cavity was logged in his records.
On Monday morning, complaining that he wasn't receiving adequate attention in the busy Bellevue ER, Lopez checked himself out against the doctors' advice. His alarmed manager, Dave McWater, called his firm's second-in-command, Ron Rizzo. Rizzo, in turn, reached out to Dahl, whom he knew from his days at the athletic commission.
Dahl met Lopez at his hotel. The now-dethroned champ was headed to John F. Kennedy International Airport, eager to board a flight to Las Vegas to see his son, born just weeks ago on Nov. 16.

"I looked at the scan when I saw him Monday morning," Dahl said. "I just said, 'Thank God you're alive.'"

Teofimo Lopez's condition worsened after the weigh-in when he started to rehydrate, but he said he thought the issue was related to his asthma. Rich Graessle/Icon Sportswire
She told him he could not fly, and directed him to check in immediately at New York-Presbyterian Weill Cornell Medical Center. Doctors there confirmed the pneumomediastinum diagnosis. He was discharged Thursday morning and advised not to fly for at least two weeks.

"I don't know how he went 12 rounds without being able to breathe," Dahl said. "But he has air where it's not supposed to be, and it's dangerous for him to get on an airplane."
Though Lopez was scheduled to have earned almost $3.2 million for the Kambosos fight, the lead-up marked an excruciating period in his young life. In August, he separated from his wife of just two years. In October he said he spoke of "thinking about killing myself" on at least three occasions this past year. That same month, his family -- whom he supports and has frequently feuded with his wife -- moved in with the young fighter. He left for New York on Nov. 20, just four days after seeing his son born. By fight week, Lopez said he had only about $20,000 left to his name.
Money was among the reasons Team Lopez let go of his nutritionists and assistant trainer, Joey Gamache -- both of whom were there for his title victories against Richard Commey and Lomachenko.

Perfecting Athletes, among the most respected nutritionists in combat sports, typically embed themselves with the fighter, basically living with Lopez through those two previous camps. This camp was much the same way until Lopez tested positive for COVID, indefinitely postponing a fight then scheduled for June 19.

"I didn't want to continue to pay them for like nine months without knowing an exact date," Lopez said. "It got too expensive."
Lopez says he knew their hydration and nutrition protocols from the Commey and Lomachenko camps. Still, while Lopez is considered big for the 135-pound weight class, there was no qualified nutritionist on hand for his weight cut. Under normal circumstances, Perfecting Athletes would have closely monitored his weight cut and rehydration periods.

Paulina Indara, the company's executive director, declined comment, citing client confidentiality.
Lopez said he didn't take Kambosos lightly, but his body has physically outgrown the division. He says his next fight will be at 140 pounds.

While he understands how lucky he is to have survived this defeat, he's looking forward to the new year.
"I've been trying to stay positive," Lopez said. "But I've been losing this whole year."
 
The backstory…


IBF mandates Teofimo Lopez, George Kambosos be vaccinated against COVID-19 ahead of title fight
  • Aug 26, 2021
    • Mike CoppingerESPN
The IBF has mandated that Teofimo Lopez and George Kambosos must be vaccinated against COVID-19 by Sept. 7 to proceed with their Oct. 5 fight in New York for the undisputed lightweight championship, Triller's Ryan Kavanaugh told ESPN on Thursday.
Both Lopez (16-0, 12 KOs) and Kambosos (19-0, 10 KOs) have agreed to the stipulation and will push forward with the Triller Fight Club pay-per-view at Hulu Theater at MSG, a rare Tuesday night of championship boxing.
The IBF ruling is the latest in a long, drawn-out saga to reschedule the 135-pound title fight. Lopez, ESPN's No. 6 pound-for-pound boxer, tested positive for COVID-19 days before his planned June 19 fight with Kambosos in Miami.

The 28-year-old Kambosos was irate and accused Lopez of being irresponsible. Neither fighter was vaccinated at the time. Lopez, 24, was symptomatic before finally testing negative on June 26.

"We signed a contract saying he'll be vaccinated," Lopez's manager, David McWater, told ESPN. "The IBF ruled he has to have a shot by the 7th. He's the IBF champ, he's going to comply."
Triller submitted contracts for the fight on Monday, ahead of Tuesday's IBF deadline for the organization to maintain its rights to the bout. It won the rights at a February purse bid with $6.018 million. Triller sought to stage the fight in Kambosos' hometown of Sydney, Australia, on Oct. 17, but a legal battle led to an IBF ruling that the bout can't be held in a location that requires quarantine.

Kavanaugh then explored the possibility of staging the fight in the Middle East before finally settling on a more natural location, New York, where Lopez used to reside and at a venue he's competed in many times.
"[Lopez] ended up harming at least 15 other performers, artists and fighters and the ripple effect of his irresponsible decisions are still being felt today," Kavanaugh said. "It's the perfect example of how not getting vaccinated can have a domino effect far and wide."
Lopez is far from the only unvaccinated boxer to contract COVID-19 ahead of his fight. Heavyweight champion Tyson Fury was half-vaccinated when he tested positive weeks before his scheduled trilogy fight with Deontay Wilder. That third encounter is now set for Oct. 9, just five days after Lopez and Kambosos battle.

And last week, former super middleweight champion David Benavidez tested positive for COVID-19, postponing his Aug. 28 fight vs. Jose Uzcategui to Nov. 13.

It's unclear if the IBF's vaccine ruling will lead to other such mandates from sanctioning bodies and commissions.
Kambosos, ESPN's No. 9 lightweight, is set to earn a career-high $2.106 million. Lopez will rake in $3.912 million, also a career best.

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Very unfortunate that this happened to Lopez but hopefully it can serve as a lesson of precaution to those that see what some of the clear minded have been saying from the start.
 




 
First he said he won, 10-2. Then he claimed he lost due to corruption in boxing. Then, Eddie Hearn wanted him to lose. Then, his girlfriend left him/was messing around on him.

this may be a valid REASON, but kid's already put forth a lot of EXCUSES. He should have lead with this, if true, and never mentioned all that other stuff, most of which is alternate reality loser talk.
 
Should someone with asthma be in the fight game? His self-diagnosis almost got him killed.

Just asking.

Why even put this out other than to save face from the loss, which is a backfire cause if you were THAT bad off you should have cancelled the fight.

You weren't so bad off that you would miss out on that payday.
 
First he said he won, 10-2. Then he claimed he lost due to corruption in boxing. Then, Eddie Hearn wanted him to lose. Then, his girlfriend left him/was messing around on him.

this may be a valid REASON, but kid's already put forth a lot of EXCUSES. He should have lead with this, if true, and never mentioned all that other stuff, most of which is alternate reality loser talk.
I agree with you... He didn't look like himself, but I credited it at the moment to him underestimating Kambosas... I still say that's the case, but his medical condition likely played a factor too...
Bump for @Famous1 that said there were no side effects from taking the COVID-19 vaccine
Oh man the basketball "historian" slash internet medical "expert" is somehow linking the vaccine to Lopez's medical condition... Lopez caught Covid during the summer which caused the postponement of the fight and messing up/delaying other fighters on the card from competing and getting paid... So instead of OP doing a little research of Pneumomediastinum, which is mentioned in the article he posted and is indeed a rare but possible side effect of the covid virus, this dude decides to use his "expertise" to link the vaccine to this condition...
:roflmao: :roflmao: ok bruh...

If reading is your thing, check out this documentation from a real life medical expert that has nothing to do with the vaccine but Covid itself:

Does the vaccine cause side effects, yes in a small percentage of cases, did it have anything to do with Lopez, not at all...
 
The likely cause of the air, according to Dahl and records of physicians who saw Lopez later at New York-Presbyterian Hospital, was a small tear in his esophagus. Lopez -- whose diagnosis was complicated by his longtime asthma and a case of COVID he contracted in June -- began experiencing shortness of breath and swelling in the neck area on Friday, shortly before the weigh-in.

"I thought it was just my asthma," Lopez told ESPN, when asked why he didn't divulge his symptoms to his manager or the athletic commission during his prefight examination on Friday. "I fought through asthma before. If I told everybody, they would've canceled the fight. But I chose not to, because of the amount of pressure I was under. I didn't want to hear people say, 'Oh, another postponement.'"

Doubt you'll read the linked article so I'll copy a paste a quick relevant mention from the article which is highlighted under the Discussion portion of the case study:

"Spontaneous pneumomediastinum is a rare and self-limiting condition, which manifests as pleuritic pain and shortness of breath. Frequently, patients who present with such complications have either a history of asthma, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, or infections, or inhale cocaine."
 
Why even put this out other than to save face from the loss, which is a backfire cause if you were THAT bad off you should have cancelled the fight.

You weren't so bad off that you would miss out on that payday.
It makes no sense to do so because it obviously wasn’t a problem when he whipped Lomanchenko, who was the #1 pound for pound fighter in the world at the time. Seems like a made up excuse to cover an even bigger story.
 
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