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I treat sepsis. NASCAR icon Kyle Busch’s death shows how fast it can kill

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The sudden death of NASCAR icon Kyle Busch from pneumonia complicated by sepsis is a heartbreaking tragedy that has stunned the sports world and the nation. Known for his fierce competitiveness and athletic endurance, Kyle represented strength and passion. His passing is a sobering reminder that infections can become deadly, even in young healthy, high-performing individuals.

Professional race car drivers are exposed to some unique medical and physiological health risks because of extreme gravity forces, heat, speed, vibration, fumes. This can cause respiratory irritation, heat illness, dehydration, electrolyte abnormalities, and, also, cardiac strain as adrenaline surges during a race leading to increased blood pressure and heart rate. Racers can sweat more than a gallon during a race. It’s an intense sport. Cardiovascular strength and endurance, head, neck and core strength are vital to thrive in racing. 

So, when infection hits, it can be dangerous without proper early intervention.

Pneumonia remains one of the most common infectious illnesses in the United States and is a leading cause of sepsis, a life-threatening medical emergency that occurs when the body’s response to infection spirals out of control and begins damaging its own organs and tissues. It impacts more than 300,000 Americans each year.

HOW PNEUMONIA PROGRESSES TO SEPSIS: DOCTORS EXPLAIN AFTER KYLE BUSCH’S DEATH

Sepsis can progress rapidly, sometimes within hours, leading to organ failure, shock and death if not recognized and treated early. Pneumonia, urinary tract infections, abdominal infections and skin wounds are some common types of infections that could lead to sepsis without appropriate early intervention and treatment. Death from pneumonia and sepsis usually happens in those over the age of 65.

In Kyle’s case, he had an aggressive infection that spread from his lungs into his bloodstream. President Bill Clinton was hospitalized for urosepsis stemming from a urinary tract infection. He was immediately given IV fluids and IV antibiotics, preventing his condition from turning into septic shock.

Boxing Legend Muhammad Ali was reported to have died from septic shock after being hospitalized with a respiratory illness. Actress Sharon Stone nearly passed from sepsis due to an abscess infection in tissue that had spread.

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Many Americans mistakenly believe sepsis only affects the elderly or critically ill. While older adults and people with chronic medical conditions are certainly at higher risk, sepsis can also affect younger, active people if they pick up an aggressive infection that spreads with delayed treatment and insufficient time for healing, rest and recovery.

Bacterial pneumonia, influenza, rsv, skin infections and urinary tract infections are common illnesses that can sometimes lead to sepsis but this is usually seen in those over age 65 or under 1.

Infections that begin as “just a cold,” a sinus infection, or a respiratory illness can sometimes worsen unexpectedly and fast. Whether I’m working in the ER or clinic, these are the warning signs I tell my patients should never be ignored.

KYLE BUSCH 911 CALL REVEALS DRIVER WAS COUGHING UP BLOOD, STRUGGLING TO BREATHE ON BATHROOM FLOOR

One of the dangers of sepsis is how quickly it can escalate. The body’s immune system becomes chaotic and uncontrolled, triggering widespread inflammation, blood vessel damage, clotting abnormalities and impaired oxygen delivery to vital organs.

In severe cases, patients can develop septic shock, respiratory failure, kidney injury or acute respiratory distress syndrome in a matter of hours. The blood pressure drops, heart rate can shoot up, fever may be present. It’s serious and should never be “slept off.”

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This is why it’s important to listen to your body and do not delay seeking medical care.

Competitive talented athletes like Kyle Busch may sometimes push through illness, fatigue, dehydration, physical stress, travel demands and intense training schedules. While exercise and fitness are generally protective for overall health, no one is invincible to aggressive infections. Athletes may also dismiss early symptoms or delay seeking care because they are accustomed to performing through discomfort.

The good news is there are important steps people can take to lower their risk:

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Do not ignore difficulty breathing, worsening cough, chest pain, confusion or coughing up blood.

Sepsis is one of the leading causes of death worldwide, yet public awareness remains low. Early recognition and fast treatment with antibiotics, oxygen, fluids and supportive care can save lives.

As we all mourn the loss of Kyle Busch, we can use this moment to educate the public about the seriousness of pneumonia and sepsis. His death is not only a tragedy for racing fans, but a reminder to every American that infections can happen to anyone and that recognizing the warning signs early can save a life.

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DUKE: GOP Unites Around Paxton, Setting New Target On ‘Talafreako’

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‘God is nonbinary’
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Late-spring freeze devastates Northeast farms, threatening peach and apple crops

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Farmers across the Northeast are facing devastating losses after a rare late-April freeze destroyed hundreds of millions of dollars worth of crops, wiping out entire apple and peach harvests in some areas.

At Terhune Orchards in Princeton, New Jersey, orchard owner Tannwen Mount says the damage is unlike anything her family has experienced before.

“It was really a catastrophic loss for our whole region, not just here at Terhune Orchards,” Mount said.

Usually, spring at the orchard is marked by budding apple trees and the beginning of a busy growing season. But this year, many trees are showing little sign of life after temperatures plunged during a critical stage of crop development.

PREVIOUS CROP LOSS FOR FARMERS IN THE NORTHEAST

Agriculture officials say the freeze hit at nearly the worst possible moment.

“This is what we call a generational freeze,” said New Jersey Secretary of Agriculture Ed Wengryn. “Almost like a hundred-year storm — almost a perfect event.”

According to the New Jersey Department of Agriculture, farmers across the state lost an estimated $300 million worth of fruit crops because of the freeze. Apples and peaches were among the hardest hit.

Mount says the widespread nature of the damage makes this season especially difficult.

“Never have we lost multiple crops all at once for the season,” she said.

NEBRASKA RANCHERS STRUGGLE TO RECOVER FROM HISTORIC WILDFIRES AS DROUGHT WORSENS CRISIS

The freeze also impacted neighboring Pennsylvania, one of the nation’s top peach-producing states, raising concerns about reduced fruit supplies throughout the Northeast and beyond.

“There’s just not going to be any peaches from this region,” Wengryn warned.

In response to the losses, New Jersey Governor Mikie Sherrill has requested federal disaster relief to help struggling farmers stay afloat. 

State officials say low-interest federal loans could provide critical support as growers attempt to recover from a season with little or no fruit to sell.

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“It’s an inexpensive source of money to help pay your bills and kind of carry you through this growing season,” Wengryn explained. “Because you’re not going to have a product to sell to get your next year going.”

Despite the damage, some farmers are finding ways to adapt.

At Terhune Orchards, Mount says surviving crops like strawberries, blueberries, blackberries and vegetables could help offset some of the losses.

“We’re in the middle of our strawberry season. Blueberries and blackberries look great, and this is the year for pick-your-own vegetables,” Mount said. “So we’re doing things a little bit different.”

She’s also encouraging consumers to support local agriculture during a difficult year for farmers across the region.

“This is the year to really support your local farmers,” Mount said. “Come out and buy local produce.”

The U.S. Department of Agriculture recently announced relief assistance for Pennsylvania farmers affected by the freeze. USDA officials say New Jersey’s request is still under review.

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MORNING GLORY: Republicans, stop fighting each other. We can’t let Democrats seize the Senate

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Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton is the Republican nominee for the U.S. Senate seat currently held by Sen. John Cornyn after Paxton handily won the runoff against Cornyn on Tuesday. When President Donald Trump endorsed Paxton late in the race, the campaign was effectively over. It is President Trump’s GOP, and his endorsement in a primary is the decider. Period.

Had Cornyn been the nominee, his re-election would have been a layup. Paxton’s race against Texas state Rep. James Talarico will be much more like a contested 3-pointer in the NBA than a layup. Talarico is indeed, as President Trump nicely summed it up, “weird.” But even given that, Paxton will need to raise a ton of money because the engines of the Democratic fundraising machine are already at top speed for the hard-left Talarico. Paxton should win, but even Golden State Warriors star and future NBA Hall of Famer Steph Curry hits only slightly more than 42% of his shots from beyond the arc. Curry may be the best ever, but it’s a tough task to drill that shot.

So too is Paxton’s task. The entire Texas GOP will need to get behind him quickly, and Paxton will need Cornyn’s half-million runoff voters and his financial supporters. The whole GOP will need to swing behind Paxton, even though Cornyn is respected and admired by longtime conservatives like me who value his knowledge of the Constitution, his work on the Judiciary Committee in every tough fight there over decades, and his tenure as GOP whip. But party loyalists have to know that ours is a two-party system and Winston Churchill’s admonition, “Trust the people!” applies in every fair contest.

So too does the wisdom of another brilliant prime minister of Great Britain — Benjamin Disraeli, whose years as leader of the United Kingdom’s Conservatives came in the 19th century.

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“It is not becoming in any Minister to decry party who has risen by party,” Disraeli declared long ago. “We should always remember that if we were not partisans, we should not be Ministers.” The same applies to every elected member of the GOP Senate stung by the defeat dealt their friend by the Lone Star State’s Republican voters.

The Senate majority is very much up for grabs in the fall. Republicans must defend four seats in which Democrats will mount well-financed campaigns, even if their nominees are weak. Sens. Susan Collins of Maine and Jon Husted of Ohio face hard-left Democrats in Graham Platner and former Sen. Sherrod Brown. Platner is quickly becoming an albatross for Democrats across the country, as well as in Maine, but Maine is a purple-to-blue state. Brown is as formidable a candidate as Democrats can field in ruby-red Ohio.

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Republicans also have to defend an open seat in North Carolina. Former national GOP chairman Michael Whatley has considerable skills and financial backing, but he drew the best candidate of all the Democrats in 2026’s close races: former Tar Heel State Gov. Roy Cooper. Democrats have a vulnerable incumbent in Georgia, where Sen. Jon Ossoff is still very much the “accidental senator,” but he is as hard-left as Democratic activists and donors want. Michigan, Minnesota and New Hampshire are all seats held by retiring Democrats, and Republicans should nominate excellent candidates not just against Ossoff but also in these three states.

So while the GOP’s current margin in the Senate is three, and control would flip to Democrats only if their nominees win four of the seven seats “in play,” that’s not an impossible result, especially in the sixth year of any presidency.

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The actual accomplishments of all presidents eventually get reduced to two or three lines in American textbooks. TR, for example, is best known for the Great White Fleet, the national park system — and the election of Woodrow Wilson and all the ill that was brought down upon the country because of Roosevelt’s decision to split the GOP in 1912. Richard Nixon’s three are summed up as opening China, détente with the Soviets and Watergate. It pretty much works that way for everyone not named Lincoln or Washington.

Right now, President Trump’s tentative trio is saving the Constitution with his three Supreme Court nominees, the war with Iran and his remarkable 2016 upset and 2024 comeback.

If the Senate flips, that record is going to change dramatically, as the lawfare Trump faced while out of office will pale next to the procession of articles of impeachment from the House and never-ending trials in the Senate — none of which would succeed in removing Trump from office but all of which will drain the last two years of his tenure of joy and of other possible legislative accomplishments.

Holding on to the Senate majority is vital to the president, the party and especially the country. The Democrats have collectively embraced an agenda of extreme policy and rhetoric. So, whatever your feelings about any of the GOP’s Senate nominees, put them aside and realize — once again — it is the party with the majority in the two chambers of Congress that sets much of the agenda. There simply isn’t any room to brood over tough losses.

Hugh Hewitt is a Fox News contributor and host of “The Hugh Hewitt Show” heard weekday afternoons from 3 PM to 6 PM ET on the Salem Radio Network, and simulcast on Salem News Channel. Hugh drives Americans home on the East Coast and to lunch on the West Coast on over 400 affiliates nationwide, and on all the streaming platforms where SNC can be seen. He is a frequent guest on the Fox News Channel’s news roundtable, hosted by Bret Baier weekdays at 6pm ET. A son of Ohio and a graduate of Harvard College and the University of Michigan Law School, Hewitt has been a Professor of Law at Chapman University’s Fowler School of Law since 1996 where he teaches Constitutional Law. Hewitt launched his eponymous radio show from Los Angeles in 1990. Hewitt has frequently appeared on every major national news television network, hosted television shows for PBS and MSNBC, written for every major American paper, has authored a dozen books and moderated a score of Republican candidate debates, most recently the November 2023 Republican presidential debate in Miami and four Republican presidential debates in the 2015-16 cycle. Hewitt focuses his radio show and his column on the Constitution, national security, American politics and the Cleveland Browns and Guardians. Hewitt has interviewed tens of thousands of guests from Democrats Hillary Clinton and John Kerry to Republican Presidents George W. Bush and Donald Trump over his 40 years in broadcasting. This column previews the lead story that will drive his radio/ TV show today.

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