Doctors ‘begin process to bring Schumacher out of induced coma (Update)

UPDATE On Tuesday, the Irish news website Independent.ie reported that a medical expert in Hamburg, Germany, has shared concerns about the dangers of bringing a patient out of a medically induced coma.

Professor Heinzpeter Moecke of the Institute for Emergency Medicine at the Asklepios Clinic went so far as to say that waking Schumacher could leave him in a “permanent vegetative state."

“There is unfortunately the risk that in sneaking out of a deep artificial sleep the patient is then in a waking coma," he said in a published report on the website. “This would mean a permanent vegetative state where Schumacher would effectively be paralyzed. Waking up from an artificial sleep can leave the patient initially confused, not sure of who he is or where he is."

02/04/14 (GMM) There is substance to widespread reports doctors are now trying to wake Michael Schumacher from his month-long induced coma.

The seven time world champion's manager Sabine Kehm played down the "speculation" on Wednesday, after the French sports daily L'Equipe said Schumacher, 45, has entered a recovery phase in which the medical team at Grenoble hospital would begin to ease the anesthesia.

L'Equipe said the awakening process, which could take several days and even weeks, actually began on Tuesday, led by the Grenoble doctor Emmanuel Gay.

The report said Schumacher had initially "responded positively" to the process.

Actually, L'Equipe was not the first to report the story, after the respected Le Journal de Dimanche said on Sunday that the beginnings of the awakening process were set to begin.

And, crucially, the stories were reportedly confirmed by the Grenoble neurosurgeon Stephan Chabardes, according to French radio RMC, and BFMTV television.

Germany's Welt newspaper asked Kehm about Chabardes' reported confirmation, but Schumacher's manager referred only to her new media statement about "speculation".

And Bild newspaper reported that a new memo was sent to all employees at the treating Grenoble hospital, warning them not to disclose information "about the patient M Schumacher".

L'Equipe deputy chief editor Jeremie Arbona, however, told Bild: "We cannot disclose our sources, of course, but they are reliable."

No matter what the truth is, Schumacher's situation remains severe. A leading German neurosurgeon, Andreas Ferbert, is quoted by the newsmagazine Focus: "Dcots put a patient in a coma for three or four weeks only when the condition of the brain is very serious.

"Four weeks is a very long time," he explained.

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