The Great Mankato Seafood Scare of 2012 has passed.
A day after suffering an allergic food reaction, presumably to his lunchtime jambalaya, Vikings running back Adrian Peterson was back in good health and good spirits Tuesday.
During afternoon practice at Minnesota State University, Peterson went through a grueling on-field workout with strength and conditioning coach Tom Kanavy, hoisting dumbbells, performing several rope drills and running sprints.
A day earlier, Peterson had to be rushed to the hospital when his lunch in the cafeteria at Gage Hall triggered a frightening emergency. Something in the jambalaya caused Peterson's throat to itch then close. His face and eyes started swelling and his breathing became impaired too.
Quickly, Peterson made two calls to head athletic trainer Eric Sugarman.
Sugarman rushed to Peterson's dorm room and stuck the running back with an EpiPen, helping Peterson's breathing as the ambulance came to take him to the hospital.
"It was pretty scary. I must say that," Peterson said. "But I didn't panic. After that second phone call, I was getting ready to run downstairs and do something differently. But those guys came pretty fast. And we got everything under control."
At the hospital, Peterson received an I.V. that, he said, included Benadryl and some other medicine to calm the reaction. Most puzzling to the Vikings star was that he had no known food allergies before Monday's incident.