VATICAN CITY: Pope Francis had a quiet night time in hospital, the Vatican stated on Sunday (Feb 23), the morning after revealing the 88-year-old was in a “critical” condition.
The Holy See had late on Saturday reported the alarming information that the pope, who has been in hospital since Feb 14, had suffered a chronic respiratory assault and required blood transfusions.
“The night time handed peacefully, the pope rested,” the Holy See stated in a brief replace on Sunday morning.
The Argentine pontiff, head of the Catholic Church since 2013, was initially admitted to Rome’s Gemelli hospital with bronchitis, nevertheless it developed into double pneumonia.
“The Holy Father’s situation continues to be crucial, due to this fact, as defined (on Friday), the pope shouldn’t be out of hazard,” the Vatican stated in an everyday medical bulletin on Saturday night.
“In the mean time the prognosis is reserved,” it stated.
Francis continues to be alert and “spent the day in an armchair even when he was struggling greater than” the day earlier than, the Vatican stated.
It stated he had on Saturday morning suffered a “extended asthmatic respiratory disaster, which additionally required the applying of high-flow oxygen”.
Day by day blood exams additionally “confirmed thrombocytopenia, related to anaemia, which required the administration of blood transfusions”, it added.
Thrombocytopenia is a situation that happens when the platelet rely in somebody’s blood is just too low, which might trigger bother stopping bleeding – and might be life-threatening.
Blood or platelet transfusions, delivered through an intravenous (IV) line right into a blood vessel, are given to people who find themselves both bleeding closely or at very excessive danger of bleeding, in keeping with the US Nationwide Institutes of Well being (NIH).
“The pope will get worse,” headlined Italy’s Corriere della Sera newspaper on Sunday morning, whereas La Repubblica described it because the “darkest day” on the Vatican.
“The scenario is turning into extra worrying,” Fabrizio Pregliasco, a number one Italian virologist, instructed La Stampa each day, including that “the subsequent few hours and days will probably be essential”.