OT: RIP Nick Mangold at 41

kupuna133

All-American
Jul 13, 2015
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Had the pleasure to meet him a couple of times. What a man! Humble and generous with time and money. He was a giver in the true sense of the word.
 

MADHAT1

Heisman
Apr 1, 2003
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RIP Nick and my condolences go out to all that knew and cared for him
 

Knight Shift

Heisman
May 19, 2011
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Leaves behind a wife & 4 kids. Ugh

Kidney disease sucks. Dialysis sucks more. More people need to think about donating their organs.

RIP
Reading his Wikipedia page, he had kidney disease since 2006. He made a plea online on October 14, 2025 for a kidney donor. Did his health deteriorate rapidly to the point where he did not realize he needed a donor until less than 2 weeks ago? Dialysis does suck- during my years at Rutgers, I was on a paid ambulance that transported dialysis patients to and from their appointments.
 

MrsScrew

All-Conference
Jan 17, 2023
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Reading his Wikipedia page, he had kidney disease since 2006. He made a plea online on October 14, 2025 for a kidney donor. Did his health deteriorate rapidly to the point where he did not realize he needed a donor until less than 2 weeks ago? Dialysis does suck- during my years at Rutgers, I was on a paid ambulance that transported dialysis patients to and from their appointments.

It is definitely unusual. I just read a NYP article that said he had CKD (chronic kidney disease) since 2006. You can have, CKD but not need dialysis or a transplant, it gets watched & monitored by your nephrologist.
He said he got very sick over the summer & went to the doctor when he was told he needed a new kidney. If CKD was controlled/monitored you usually get a catheter put in your chest for urgent dialysis until you either get a long term fistula or peritoneal catheter put in or you get the transplant. I run a surgery center that puts these catheters in every day. You can live for years & years on dialysis. Not a great life since dialysis is 3x a week for 4 hours a day if you don't do the home dialysis. But also a bunch of restrictions on your life.
The article, that was intererviewing him, he says he was on dialysis, but he did say he waited at least 2 months after getting symptomatic before seeing a doctor.
The nephrologist I work with will be in on Wednesday. I'll circle back with, hopefully, some clarification.

The article I was reading

 
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CollegeSenior

All-Conference
Apr 2, 2021
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He knew he was living with kidney disease and waited until after he had lost 35 pounds in two months to see his doctor?

It might not have saved Nick’s life to see his doctor sooner but at my age I’ve known too many people who have died sooner than they should have just because they ignored symptoms.
 

MrsScrew

All-Conference
Jan 17, 2023
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He knew he was living with kidney disease and waited until after he had lost 35 pounds in two months to see his doctor?

It might not have saved Nick’s life to see his doctor sooner but at my age I’ve known too many people who have died sooner than they should have just because they ignored symptoms.

that's exactly the part that stood out to me. Although, at 41, even knowing he had CKD, there is a lot of denial that your disease is progressing, especially knowing that dialysis would be the next step.
 

Knight Shift

Heisman
May 19, 2011
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that's exactly the part that stood out to me. Although, at 41, even knowing he had CKD, there is a lot of denial that your disease is progressing, especially knowing that dialysis would be the next step.
"Young" men can have a tendency to live in denial of health problems. Old men too. Not defining young and old.
 
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LETSGORU91

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Jul 9, 2025
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It is definitely unusual. I just read a NYP article that said he had CKD (chronic kidney disease) since 2006. You can have, CKD but not need dialysis or a transplant, it gets watched & monitored by your nephrologist.
He said he got very sick over the summer & went to the doctor when he was told he needed a new kidney. If CKD was controlled/monitored you usually get a catheter put in your chest for urgent dialysis until you either get a long term fistula or peritoneal catheter put in or you get the transplant. I run a surgery center that puts these catheters in every day. You can live for years & years on dialysis. Not a great life since dialysis is 3x a week for 4 hours a day if you don't do the home dialysis. But also a bunch of restrictions on your life.
The article, that was intererviewing him, doesn't make it sound like he had been on dialysis, but he did say he waited at least 2 months after getting symptomatic before seeing a doctor.
The nephrologist I work with will be in on Wednesday. I'll circle back with, hopefully, some clarification.

The article I was reading

Somethings not adding up. I wonder if he was refusing dialysis, became uremic and went into multisystem organ failure, then it was too late. Either that or he had some acute, medical event, unrelated to but common in renal patients and his death was labeled due to kidney disease. 🤷🏻‍♂️
 

MrsScrew

All-Conference
Jan 17, 2023
661
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Somethings not adding up. I wonder if he was refusing dialysis, became uremic and went into multisystem organ failure, then it was too late. Either that or he had some acute, medical event, unrelated to but common in renal patients and his death was labeled due to kidney disease. 🤷🏻‍♂️


I just had a chat with the nephrologist I work with. He thinks the whole thing is strange as well. Can't come up with any educated guess other then he had some type of cardiac event or, as you said, some acute medical event.