KEEP FIGHTING

Inside Michael Schumacher’s ‘secret treatment’ to ‘rebuild’ F1 legend with ‘£115,000-a-week’ medical care

MICHAEL SCHUMACHER'S health is still a mystery - but he is reported to have undergone "secret" pioneering medical treatment, stirring hopes the legendary Formula One star could be rebuilt.

Schumacher is reported to have received medical care costing as much as £115,000-a-week as his family, friends and pals all hope he can recover from his horror ski crash.

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Michael Schumacher is understood to be undergoing treatmentCredit: Getty - Contributor
His wife Corinna broke down in tears as she accepted a prize honouring MichaelCredit: Splash

Schumacher's health has been shrouded in secrecy since he suffered a catastrophic brain injury while skiing in 2013.

But it has been reported the Formula One champion has had a team of 15 nurses and doctors offering around-the-clock care for him.

The 53-year-old was placed in a medically induced coma for almost six months after the accident while he was on the slopes with his son Mick.

It was reported after the ski crash he had surgery to remove blood clots from his brain.

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But in June 2014, he was discharged from hospital so he could receive treatment at his family home near Switzerland's Lake Geneva.

His family have reportedly been forced to sell off Schumacher's beloved private jet and holiday home in Norway - worth an estimated £25m - in a bid to cover his medical costs.

And only small trickles of information have been released since, with reports that Schumacher remains in a wheelchair and can react to things around him.

However, in 2019, it was reported that Schumacher was set to undergo breakthrough stem cell therapy in a bid to regenerate and rebuild his nervous system.

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Renowned French cardiologist Dr Philippe Menasche, who had operated on him previously, was due to carry out the treatment to transfer cells from Schumacher's heart to his brain.

In stem cell therapy, cells are taken from either bone marrow or the patient's own heart and injected into other parts of the body in order to repair damaged tissue.

Italian neurosurgeon Dr Nicola Acciari said at the time that the legendary driver was suffering from muscle degeneration and osteoporosis as a result of being bed-bound for so many years.

She said: "The goal is to regenerate Michael's nervous system."

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French journalist Jean-Michel Décugis told The Times that the stem cell therapy will have an "anti-inflammatory effect" which will most likely impact the brain.

He said: "Our sources say that Michael Schumacher is receiving stem cell perfusions that... produce a systemic anti-inflammatory effect.

"That is to say they reach the whole body and you could imagine that they reach Michael Schumacher's brain.

"It's quite mysterious. Officially [Menasché] works only on the heart.

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"He is carrying out experiments with [secretome] that is made by a laboratory from new stem cells and injected into veins, until now only on animals."

NO MIRACLES

Mr Décugis also claims that Schumacher is being injected with secretome - protein found in the human body - which he says Menasche calls "stem cell juice."

Dr Menasche however warned fans that he "does not work miracles" following the first widely-reported stem cell therapy on the sports star in October 2018.

He also slammed claims he was carrying out "experiments" on the legendary racing driver.

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And in September 2019, he said details of Schumacher’s treatment would remain "secret"; for reasons of medical confidentiality.

Following the treatment at the Georges Pompidou Hospital in Paris, France, he was said to be "conscious", although few other details were given about his condition.

And years since he is claimed to have undergone the treatment, there has been no concrete updates - amid reports that the Schumacher family are seeking to spend the winter months at a new property in Majorca.

In 2020, his former boss and close friend Jean Todt revealed Schuey was receiving treatment tailored to help him "return to a more normal life".

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