👉 El Dr. José Manuel Viudes, médico clínico y neumólogo, analiza el estado de salud del Papa, destacando los avances logrados gracias a un tratamiento precoz con oxígeno de alto flujo y glóbulos rojos. Sin embargo, advierte sobre la necesidad urgente de iniciar una rehabilitación respiratoria y muscular para evitar complicaciones futuras. El Papa enfrenta inflamación crónica debido a su inactividad física, lo que ha afectado su capacidad pulmonar y otros órganos. Viudes enfatiza la importancia de una dieta mediterránea desinflamatoria y un enfoque proactivo en la recuperación para mejorar su calidad de vida.
👉 Seguí en #BuenDíaA24
📺 a24.com/vivo
👉 Seguí en #BuenDíaA24
📺 a24.com/vivo
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00:00The Pope would have had a quiet night, said the Vatican spokesman, but Cristian Martin knows it all, there in Rome.
00:09Good day 24, sir. How are you?
00:12How are you Luis? Good day. Here we are with a rainy day.
00:15With the Pope, as you said, he had a quiet night.
00:18We understand that he is active, he is lucid.
00:21A small improvement, he receives less oxygen.
00:24Blood tests give good results.
00:27Oxygen is a minor flow and he is active.
00:31In fact, he has received the visit of Edgar Peña Parra from Venezuela, his number 3,
00:37and Pietro Parolin, the Secretary of State of the Holy See, his number 2.
00:42The one who offered last night the prayer of the Rosary in Plaza San Pedro.
00:51Active, working, signing documents,
00:54getting ready to see if they do something for the beginning of Lent.
01:00There is a speech, a message that the Vatican made public.
01:05Tomorrow begins what is Lent in the face of Easter.
01:09The Pope wants to be present, but hey, this is a sign that by receiving more leaders and people from the Vatican,
01:19his condition is better, he is in critical condition, but there is a slight improvement.
01:26Really encouraging in the face of what will be the two weeks of hospitalization here at the Gemelli Hospital.
01:33There was an appearance of someone very well known here in Argentina,
01:38but that the European media showed with surprise, which is Juan Grabois.
01:42What happened with Grabois, Cristian?
01:45Yes, it seems that he wanted to sneak to the 10th floor, to the Pope's room,
01:50with a letter saying that he was a friend of the Pope.
01:54A gendarme seems to have recognized him, he passed a check, but then they stopped him.
01:59He was not on the guest list, he was not receiving visits.
02:04The Pope also said that he was a Vatican consultant.
02:09I think the Argentine political activist occupies a certain position,
02:13but today all the European media echoed.
02:16An intruder wanted to get into the Pope's room.
02:20This is how the European media mark him.
02:22Of course, they don't know him very well.
02:24Then the one who finds out realizes who he is and what he had.
02:27And he has a relationship with the Pope, but the gendarmes stopped him.
02:32It was just this, they physically detained him.
02:36There was no criminal process, much less was he arrested by the police, right?
02:41No, it was a misunderstanding, I think.
02:44He even gave the letter to someone who passed it to the guard.
02:49In principle, his letter of good wishes for the Pope would have reached the hands of Pope Francis.
02:55That was it.
02:56But well, you can imagine, here he caused the title,
02:59only an intruder tries to enter the room or the papal suite on the 10th floor.
03:05Up there there was a guard on both sides and it seems that the first control had passed.
03:10He later said, or wanted to deny it, but the information we have is that yes,
03:15the intention was really to be face to face with Pope Francis.
03:19Thank you, Cristian. We'll be back in Rome when you say so.
03:22A hug for me.
03:23See you later.
03:24The doctor is José Manuel Viudes, he is a clinical doctor, gerontologist and humorologist.
03:27Thank you, Doc, for being with us.
03:29Good morning, Luis, thank you.
03:30It is also incorrect that I tell you this, because you do not have clinical history and so on.
03:34But how would you describe the Pope's picture?
03:37In two stages. The first, let's go for the good one.
03:40The good one is that I said a couple of days ago that the early procedure of high-flow oxygen,
03:45which is something that later, if you want, I explain that it is not the oxygen that people know,
03:49the hospital is not, and give him red blood cells, they made his lung rest.
03:55The red blood cells, what they do is take the oxygen that reaches the lung and takes it to the organs,
03:59so that the organs do not fail.
04:01The medulla failed to produce red blood cells, the pancreas failed.
04:07And what high-flow oxygen does is put more pressure on it with a valve,
04:12a special mask, more pressure and many more liters of oxygen
04:16so that much more oxygen reaches the area where we need the oxygen.
04:19So that was good.
04:21It is a maneuver that we use a lot in COVID to prevent intubation, which is the worst of the SMEs.
04:25So they were very early.
04:27This is a COVID learning that we all had.
04:30And well, today it is better. That's the good thing.
04:33The bad thing is that I would not like us to waste time and take advantage of the fact that it is better now
04:38to start with the respiratory and, let's say, muscle rehabilitation of the Pope
04:43so that this can come out as soon as possible.
04:45He is a man who is very inflamed, chronically inflamed.
04:49And inflammation, for you to have an idea, is something that happens chronically,
04:53especially in older adults, that the body, due to an inflammation,
04:56in his case, it was the knee that did not operate.
04:58And that's why he started with the wheelchair, which is the beginning of this story.
05:01It starts there and ends with this.
05:03When you stop walking, you stop making a series of substances,
05:06the muscles atrophy and the body every day sends a series of firefighters
05:11to try to stop the inflammation, which would be the knee.
05:14But it fails, obviously, it is not solved.
05:18The firefighters go there every day, they get tired.
05:21When we need it now, in acute inflammation, so that they can solve it.
05:24How do you explain it? How interesting.
05:26When we need now that the firefighters go to solve this problem,
05:30what happens to them? They are very tired.
05:32They are not effective, they are tired.
05:34So we had to suffer with other things.
05:37The good news is that ...
05:39The fact that the Pope has not had absolute rest,
05:42that he has not stopped working, that he has sat down,
05:45that he has had meetings, which in some way require him, right?
05:48Yes.
05:49To be a little more awake and so on.
05:51Does it influence the improvement to arrive a little later?
05:54Or somehow having an active brain is better in these cases?
05:59Well, it has two things.
06:01Having an active brain, without a doubt.
06:03And that's what protects him.
06:05He is an inflamed man, from what I said.
06:07But what does he have in favor? His reason to get up.
06:10The longevity zone, what they have in common, among several things,
06:12are people who know why they get up and have an altruistic spirit.
06:15Queen Isabel, Myrtha, the Pope.
06:17Look, they are people who transcend for altruism,
06:20for a job they do rather for the common good than for them.
06:23But what do they have against?
06:25This boy, I wanted to see him, I'm worried.
06:27That we should be firmer.
06:29The Pope has a lot of character.
06:31I am a friend of the one who did the Pope, he is Italian, he graduated with me.
06:34And I know him for him.
06:36He has a lot of character and he is going to change us in two things
06:38that must be changed drastically now.
06:40One, that.
06:41The free time he has, he has to use it for muscular and heroic rehabilitation.
06:44He can't be spending that energy, which is little.
06:46He has workers, very tired firefighters.
06:49You have to train those firefighters to get out of the hospital.
06:52And the second thing is the diet.
06:54The diet of the Pope, I imagine, like a porter
06:57to have breakfast at noon with coffee with milk
07:00and have lunch with fried bread.
07:02No, he has a hyper-protein diet, super healthy.
07:05Notice that he already failed the pancreas, they had to use insulin.
07:08A Mediterranean diet that scientific work has shown
07:11that it is a non-inflammatory diet.
07:13And one more thing, I would even be obsessive.
07:16Because obviously, to eat you have to have aerobic capacity.
07:20You need air.
07:21But how important is this rehabilitation?
07:23I mean, dedicate a lot because it's boring, it's not fun,
07:27but it's fundamental, right?
07:29This valuable time is fundamental because he is fine now
07:32because we put this on him, right?
07:34An airbag, which is oxygen and red blood cells,
07:36and we put insulin on him.
07:37We are supplying the organs that are so weakened
07:40that these firefighters are not working.
07:42But it is now or never, even some patients,
07:45I think the Pope is not going to give up.
07:47Some patients are so invasive
07:49that we put a probe to feed them with a hyper-protein diet
07:52and without glucose.
07:54Why? It seems invasive, right?
07:56Is it a nasogastric probe?
07:58Of course, of course.
07:59Why?
08:00For 5 or 6 days you give them a hyper-protein diet,
08:03without glucose,
08:04the muscles that are needing more direct nutrition,
08:08they take that,
08:09and in 5 or 6 days it is a strengthened type,
08:11muscular and aerobically.
08:13The truth is that it is super interesting, Doc.
08:15I congratulate you for the pedagogical ability to tell us this.
08:19Thank you very much.