The Mercury News

Mets’ Syndergaar­d on DL after contractin­g disease

- By The Associated Press

In the latest bizarre medical developmen­t for the baffling New York Mets, ace pitcher Noah Syndergaar­d is headed back to the disabled list after contractin­g handfoot-and-mouth disease.

The team figures it’s likely Syndergaar­d caught the contagious virus when he made an appearance at a baseball camp for kids last Thursday during the All-Star break. Mets manager Mickey Callaway said that probably explains why Syndergaar­d weakened and his velocity decreased during Friday night’s victory at Yankee Stadium.

“Hand-foot-and-mouth, are you serious? I guess it’s very uncommon in adults, period,” Callaway said Sunday. “It’s kind of odd. Maybe the first DL stint in Major League Baseball with hand-foot-andmouth? I don’t know. A record or something.”

According to WebMD.com, hand-foot-and-mouth disease is an infectious disease that “most often occurs in children under 10 and is characteri­zed by a rash of small blister-like sores on the palms of the hands, soles of the feet, and in the mouth. Symptoms include fever, sore throat, and headache.”

The disease can spread from one person to another through saliva or fluid from blisters, among other things, and the infection normally passes in a week. The only treatment is a pain reliever such as acetaminop­hen, according to the website.

Syndergaar­d, who missed most of last season with a torn lat muscle, just returned from the disabled list July 13 after being sidelined for more than six weeks with a strained ligament in his right index finger. He is 6-1 with a 2.89 ERA in 13 starts this year for the struggling Mets, who began the night last in the NL East.

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