It’s back.

A couple of years removed from a mumps outbreak across the locker room, Wild wingers Zach Parise and Jason Pominville have been diagnosed with mumps. They did not play in Monday’s game against the Los Angeles Kings, and their availability for a two-game road trip against the Winnipeg Jets and Columbus Blue Jackets is in serious doubt.

That news forced coach Bruce Boudreau to shuffle his lines completely three times before the game.

“It seemed like every 15 minutes something new was happening,” he said.

He eventually settled on his lines, and the Wild ended up earning a dramatic 5-4 win over the Kings.

While he was happy after the win, Boudreau was shocked when he initially heard about Parise and Pominville.

“What can you do?” Boudreau said. “You just sit there and go, ‘Here we go.’ Sometimes we have to just grit it out and let emotion take over, and I think that’s what we did for the most part tonight.”

No other person within the organization had been diagnosed with the mumps as of Monday night, though assistant coach Scott Stevens was not on the bench for the game against the Kings.

Eric Staal joked after the game that he hoped no one had it, because after Mikael Granlund scored the winning goal in overtime, the entire Wild bench emptied and mobbed him behind the net.

“If we’re going to be passing (it) around, the celebration after Granny’s goal is definitely a lot of gloves in face and excitement,” Staal joked. “So if someone had it in that pile, then we all got it. So we’ll see it what happens.”

In 2014, Wild defensemen Ryan Suter, Jonas Brodin, Marco Scandella, Christian Folin and Keith Ballard were diagnosed with the mumps, as it spread like wildfire across the NHL with at least 14 confirmed cases.

“I don’t know what to say to that,” Granlund said with an eye roll. “It’s a lot for a team in a few years.”

Several players on the Vancouver Canucks started to show symptoms of mumps over the weekend, though defenseman Troy Stecher is the only player with a confirmed case of the mumps. That was the first reported case in the NHL this season.

Symptoms typically appear 16 to 18 days after infection, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and the Wild played the Canucks on Feb. 4.

Members of the organization who have symptoms are being tested immediately and placed in isolation for a five-day period. Team doctors recently provided players and staff an MMR vaccination, and the organization will continue to work closely with the NHL, NHLPA and the Minnesota Department of Health to help prevent further infection, according to a team release.

Mumps is a contagious disease caused by a virus, according to the CDC. It typically starts with a few days of fever, headache, muscle aches, fatigue, and loss of appetite, followed by swollen salivary glands.