Silvio Berlusconi has been hospitalized in intensive care since last Wednesday due to a serious lung infection due to chronic leukemia. According to reports, the third night in San Raffaele was quiet. Conditions are considered stable even if attention remains very high. Especially after the first hours of the great fear on Thursday, the clinical picture is now stable and the treatments seem to bear fruit.
There has been no official word from the health facility in the past few hours, but it was the former prime minister himself who spoke on Friday. “It’s tough, but this time I’ll make it, too. Even in difficult and sensitive situations, I’ve managed to pull back. I will succeed,” Berlusconi told “Il Giornale”. According to Adnkronos, a health resource, there is no medical bulletin even today.
As children and family members continue to visit the Monza president, fans – including the very devoted Macrì, who arrived by train from Puglia – and Forza Italia supporters gather outside the hospital as they stand by to express their sympathy for the leader. On Friday, as the Knight’s youngest son, Luigi, left, he gave reporters a thumbs up, as if to tell reporters that the situation had improved. Also there, as always, were their children, Marina, Piersilvio and Barbara, immortalized in a long hug when her brother Paolo and San Raffaele left.
Some official correspondence about the former prime minister’s health will arrive from San Raffaele on Saturday. The latest update is on Thursday, the day after his hospitalization, his personal physician Alberto Zangrillo and head of hematology units, Fabio Ciceri, said: “President Silvio Berlusconi is currently hospitalized in intensive care for treatment for a lung infection. The contagious event is part of a chronic hematological condition of which he has been a carrier for some time. : chronic myelomonocytic leukemia”.
In the medical bulletin, it was stated that leukemia causing pneumonia “it was determined that there is no permanent chronic phase and evolutionary features in acute leukemia”. The hospital note states, “The current therapeutic strategy provides for a specific cytoreductive therapy aimed at treating pulmonary infection, limiting the adverse effects of pathological hyperleukocytosis, and restoring pre-existing clinical conditions.”
Source: Today IT

Emma Fitzgerald is an accomplished political journalist and author at The Nation View. With a background in political science and international relations, she has a deep understanding of the political landscape and the forces that shape it.