News Brain aneurysm, staph infection and heart murmur turn young gun’s life upside down

Cappuccino

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“It was pretty scary; everything just happening so fast – and then one thing after the other was pretty hard to process,” Bulldog Tuipulotu Katoa said from his hospital bed on Saturday.
There have been a lot of difficult stories to come out of the Bulldogs camp this year, but none compare to what one of their young players is going through.
Tuipulotu Katoa, brother of Sharks star Sione (inset), went to hospital with a staph infection, but tests revealed he also had a serious heart problem and a brain aneurysm.

Tuipulotu Katoa, brother of Sharks star Sione (inset), went to hospital with a staph infection, but tests revealed he also had a serious heart problem and a brain aneurysm. CREDIT:GETTY, INSTAGRAM
Katoa is a promising player and the brother of Sharks star Sione Katoa, but right now he is fighting a battle far bigger than football.
On Friday, the NSW Blues under-20s representative had surgery after an aneurysm was found on his brain. That shock came just days after he was told he will need open-heart surgery.

All of this only came to light after the 22-year-old was admitted to hospital because of another serious health problem.
Katoa fell ill while in the Bulldogs’ team bubble on the Gold Coast. He was subsequently admitted to hospital with what developed into a staph infection. Staphylococcus aureus is a common bacterium that lives on the skin, or in the nose, and is also called golden staph. In most situations, it is harmless, but if it enters the body through a cut in the skin, it can be deadly.

It is unclear how it got into Katoa’s blood but a possibility is through a minor cut on his knee.
While medical staff were discovering the infection, they also found Katoa had a heart murmur and, as a result, he had an ultrasound.
Doctors put Katoa on a course of antibiotics, which they hope will prove helpful in dealing with the infection, but it’s a long road. The best-case scenario is that Katoa will need six more weeks of intravenous antibiotics. If all the bacteria is gone, he could then return slowly to training, but it will need to be over eight weeks.

Once he reaches that point, there is still plenty more for him to get through. Doctors will need to ascertain if his heart valves are able to handle intense aerobic activity. Katoa will require surgery in two weeks if the antibiotics don’t work to clear the bacteria, or possibly in three months on his heart valves.
The reality is that even if he successfully returns to the football field, he will eventually require open-heart surgery (likely in about three to four years) to fix the valves. That surgery would force him out of all sport for at least a year. And that would be possible only if the valves can handle high-level aerobic activity.
https://www.smh.com.au/sport/nrl/mo...traordinary-final-season-20210918-p58std.html
Katoa was absorbing all that information when he received another setback while in hospital: an MRI picked up the aneurysm on his brain. He had been complaining of bad headaches and underwent surgery on Friday to have a stent inserted. He is being cared for and watched over by the entire Bulldogs organisation. General manager Phil Gould, chief executive Aaron Warburton and footy manager Steve Litvensky are doing all they can for him.
“Tui has been through a terrible time over the past few weeks, but has faced the challenges with determination and a smile,” Gould said. “Our absolute priority is to get Tui healthy again and back to his family. His surgery this week went very well. We are hopeful they have this serious infection under control.

“Tui will then be assessed as to whether he requires more surgery to address any damage caused by the infection. Obviously, the players can’t get to see him in hospital at the moment, but they are able to keep in contact and support Tui through messages. He has been unbelievably tough and positive through the whole ordeal.”
The footy world wishes him a speedy recovery.
 

Spoonman84

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Poor bloke wishing him all the best. Hopefully he makes a full recovery and can keep his career going but it doesn’t sound good.

It’s been a pretty grim couple of weeks on the medical side of things at the Dogs lately and it puts things into perspective. Katoa isn’t the best player but it would be a great story if he can come back from this.
 

Artybulldog 26

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Far out! We’re counting our lucky stars here at the dogs with all the close calls that we’ve had. Shows us how much we need to value our lives, because one day we may not be here tomorrow. Wishing Tui all the best. Good luck mate!
 

Baseball Furies

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Wow! So much for him to get through and process, hope he recovers and can get back to a relatively normal life.

There’s more to worry about than getting back to playing footy!
 

Alan79

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Must be a tough thing for a young fellow to hear. After having had what many aspiring NRL players would consider a dream year, to hear it's potentially all over in the blink of an eye with no possibility of getting through it no matter how much work you put in.

One positive at the moment is that at least he's contracted for two years (I think) so even if he gets medically retired he'll have a solid income for a while and can sort out a new career without thestress of worrying about money.

Hope he comes through all this and makes it back to footy though. But longevity has to be the most important priority for him and he'll have to take some consolation in the fact that things could have ended much more permanently due to these issues.
 

Chris Harding

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Poor Tui; he's copped a terrible trifecta.

This is now the time for him to consider his future in the game. The possible impact on his heart, or the risk of a concussion could be the worse thing he could face in the rough world of NRL. If I was his dad, I'd be suggesting he strongly look at a new career.

Hope he recovers fully, and the Dogs give him all the care and advice they can.
 

D- voice

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“It was pretty scary; everything just happening so fast – and then one thing after the other was pretty hard to process,” Bulldog Tuipulotu Katoa said from his hospital bed on Saturday.
There have been a lot of difficult stories to come out of the Bulldogs camp this year, but none compare to what one of their young players is going through.
Tuipulotu Katoa, brother of Sharks star Sione (inset), went to hospital with a staph infection, but tests revealed he also had a serious heart problem and a brain aneurysm.

Tuipulotu Katoa, brother of Sharks star Sione (inset), went to hospital with a staph infection, but tests revealed he also had a serious heart problem and a brain aneurysm. CREDIT:GETTY, INSTAGRAM
Katoa is a promising player and the brother of Sharks star Sione Katoa, but right now he is fighting a battle far bigger than football.
On Friday, the NSW Blues under-20s representative had surgery after an aneurysm was found on his brain. That shock came just days after he was told he will need open-heart surgery.

All of this only came to light after the 22-year-old was admitted to hospital because of another serious health problem.
Katoa fell ill while in the Bulldogs’ team bubble on the Gold Coast. He was subsequently admitted to hospital with what developed into a staph infection. Staphylococcus aureus is a common bacterium that lives on the skin, or in the nose, and is also called golden staph. In most situations, it is harmless, but if it enters the body through a cut in the skin, it can be deadly.

It is unclear how it got into Katoa’s blood but a possibility is through a minor cut on his knee.
While medical staff were discovering the infection, they also found Katoa had a heart murmur and, as a result, he had an ultrasound.
Doctors put Katoa on a course of antibiotics, which they hope will prove helpful in dealing with the infection, but it’s a long road. The best-case scenario is that Katoa will need six more weeks of intravenous antibiotics. If all the bacteria is gone, he could then return slowly to training, but it will need to be over eight weeks.

Once he reaches that point, there is still plenty more for him to get through. Doctors will need to ascertain if his heart valves are able to handle intense aerobic activity. Katoa will require surgery in two weeks if the antibiotics don’t work to clear the bacteria, or possibly in three months on his heart valves.
The reality is that even if he successfully returns to the football field, he will eventually require open-heart surgery (likely in about three to four years) to fix the valves. That surgery would force him out of all sport for at least a year. And that would be possible only if the valves can handle high-level aerobic activity.
https://www.smh.com.au/sport/nrl/mo...traordinary-final-season-20210918-p58std.html
Katoa was absorbing all that information when he received another setback while in hospital: an MRI picked up the aneurysm on his brain. He had been complaining of bad headaches and underwent surgery on Friday to have a stent inserted. He is being cared for and watched over by the entire Bulldogs organisation. General manager Phil Gould, chief executive Aaron Warburton and footy manager Steve Litvensky are doing all they can for him.
“Tui has been through a terrible time over the past few weeks, but has faced the challenges with determination and a smile,” Gould said. “Our absolute priority is to get Tui healthy again and back to his family. His surgery this week went very well. We are hopeful they have this serious infection under control.

“Tui will then be assessed as to whether he requires more surgery to address any damage caused by the infection. Obviously, the players can’t get to see him in hospital at the moment, but they are able to keep in contact and support Tui through messages. He has been unbelievably tough and positive through the whole ordeal.”
The footy world wishes him a speedy recovery.
Get well soon Tui
Best road to recovery is to stay positive...
God luck and God bless !!!
 

Paul Depodesta

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Imagine he didn’t have access to the nrl medical, went in for an infection on knee from footy
found aneurism and heart murmur. He would not of known otherwise best of luck to him
 

KiwiDog7

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That’s so sad you wouldn’t ever think a fit athlete would get hit by all that but goes to show things can turn for better or worse in a second

Stay strong toko
 
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