Doctors can't predict Schumacher's outlook

By AP / Wire

Doctors treating Michael Schumacher refused on Monday to predict the outcome for the former Formula One driver, saying they were taking his very critical head injury “hour by hour” following a skiing accident.

Chief anesthesiologist Jean-Francois Payen told reporters the seven-time racing champion is still in a medically induced coma. He said the medical team was focusing only on his current condition.

“We cannot predict the future for Michael Schumacher,” Payen said.

“He is in a critical state in terms of cerebral resuscitation,” he added. “We are working hour by hour.”

Schumacher, the most successful driver in Formula One history, arrived at the Grenoble University Hospital Center a day earlier already in a coma and immediately underwent brain surgery.

The German driver was skiing with his son on Sunday morning in the French Alpine resort of Meribel when he fell and hit the right side of his head on a rock. He was wearing a helmet, but the doctors said it was clearly not sufficient to prevent a serious brain injury.

“Someone who had suffered this accident without a helmet would not have made it this far,” Payen said.

Gerard Saillant, a trauma surgeon who operated on Schumacher when he broke his leg in a race crash in 1999, was at the hospital. But he said he was there in his capacity as a friend, not a doctor.

He did, however, tell reporters that Schumacher’s age – he turns 45 on January 3 – and his fitness should work in his favour.

But the Grenoble medical team was being very cautious about Schumacher’s prognosis. They are working to relieve pressure on his brain and have lowered his body temperature to between 34 and 35 degrees Celsius (93.2 to 95 degrees Fahrenheit), as part of the medically induced coma.

The area where Schumacher was skiing is part of a web of trails that slice down through a vast and, in parts, very steep snowfield.

Although challenging, the snowfield is not extreme skiing: The runs are broad and neatly tended, and the ungroomed area in between, known as off-piste, is free of trees.

Schumacher was conscious when first responders arrived on the scene, although agitated and in shock, according to the resort. He was airlifted to a local hospital and then later brought to Grenoble.

His wife and other family members are by his bedside. But his manager Sabine Kehm said reports that Jean Todt, his former Ferrari team boss and now president of motorsport’s governing body, the FIA, and Ross Brawn, who worked with Schumacher at Ferrari and Mercedes F1 teams, were at the hospital were wrong.

Schumacher has been seriously hurt before. He broke his leg in a crash at the Silverstone race course in 1999. He also suffered serious neck and spine injuries after a motorcycling accident in February 2009 in Spain.

As news of the accident spread, Formula One drivers rushed to wish Schumacher a quick recovery.

Sebastian Vettel, who was once referred to as “Baby Schumi,” told German news agency dpa: “I am shocked and hope that he will get better as soon as possible.”

Former Ferrari teammate Felipe Massa, who himself recovered from life-threatening head injuries at the Hungarian Grand Prix in 2009, wrote on Instagram: “I am praying for you my brother!! I hope you have a quick recovery!! God bless you Michael.”

The Crowd Says:

2013-12-31T07:48:24+00:00

Bayden Westerweller

Roar Guru


Michael has been my idol since I was seven, it's hard to express in words my admiration for his achievements, and even harder to comprehend the situation. Schuey has the strength to conquer his greatest fight - victory number ninety-two, which would be the sweetest of all. Thinking of his family at this difficult time.

2013-12-31T02:58:17+00:00

Daniel Bradley

Roar Rookie


I hope Michael can recover well and be able to live life just as everyone should be able to. This has to be one of the saddest stories I have ever read, listened or watched in my life knowing that someone who I admired and loved was seriously hurt and may never get to live again. When I was a child, I would often get up and watch the recordings of the Formula 1 races on Monday mornings and hope that Schuey would win. To make sure, sometimes I checked the news so then the race was worth watchable. For Christmas and birthdays, I often received the Lego Ferrari kits which had the cars Schumacher and Barrichello drove for and I would often race them around a track I would make up and do practice pit-stops with the 2 cars. I wasn't born when Ayrton Senna died but I knew how much pain and heartbreak everyone in the world had to cope when they heard the news that he was killed in that unfortunate accident at Imola in 1994 and when I heard that Schumacher's injuries were life-threatening and very critical, the first thing I could recall was Senna's death. What makes this worse is that Schumacher's birthday is on Friday this week and I know how sad it is for his wife Corinna and his 2 children, Mick and Gina-Marie as well as Ralf, Michael's brother, to suffer in such a way that they won't be able to celebrate and cherish the man who has loved his family so much as much as they did in the past knowing that the doctors can't predict how long he is going to live. Let's hope that the great man who is Michael Schumacher can be able to pull through this unfortunate event and like his 91 wins before, win what is the most important race which is his life.

2013-12-30T23:04:09+00:00

Jawad Yaqub

Roar Guru


Get well soon Michael, our thoughts are with you.

2013-12-30T21:37:53+00:00

Mark Young

Roar Guru


Hoping that MIchael is OK My thoughts with Corinna, Mick and Gina-Marie as they have such an anxious wait for their man.

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