Pope Francis in good condition, alert after surgery
Pontiff underwent 3-hour operation to remove half his colon on Sunday
Pope Francis is alert, breathing without assistance and in good overall condition following surgery to remove half of his colon, the Vatican said on Monday.
The 84-year-old Pope is expected to stay in hospital for seven days barring any complications, following his three-hour operation on Sunday night by a 10-person surgical team at Rome's Gemelli hospital, spokesman Matteo Bruni said in a statement. The hospital has a special suite on the 10th floor reserved for popes.
The Pope underwent a left hemicolectomy, a procedure in which one side of the colon is removed, Bruni said. It was the first time the Vatican had disclosed the specific nature of the surgery.
Il Messaggero, an Italian daily newspaper, reported that surgeons began the operation laparoscopically but ended up having to operate with wider incisions after encountering unspecified complications. No sources were cited.
The scheduled surgery was for symptomatic diverticular stenosis of the colon, a condition in which sac-like pouches protrude from the muscular layer of the colon, causing it to become narrow.
In addition to causing pain, the condition, which is more common in older people, can lead to bloating, inflammation and difficulty in bowel movement.
Doctors said a risk of the operation is that the connection between the joined-up parts of the colon can sometimes fail, causing more pain and possibly an infection. Such a failure is very rare but would require another surgery.
First hospitalization
It was the first time Francis has been hospitalized since his election as Pope in 2013.
The surgery appeared to be timed to coincide with a period in which he has only one public commitment — his Sunday blessing in St. Peter's Square.
Francis traditionally suspends all his general and private audiences for the month of July, although unlike predecessors, he stays in the Vatican and has never used the sprawling papal summer estate in the cooler Alban Hills, south of Rome.
Italian state TV said among those praying for Francis was his ailing predecessor in the papacy, Benedict XVI, who has been living a life of prayer and meditation in a monastery on Vatican grounds since he retired in 2013, saying he didn't have the strength to adequately carry out papal duties. The TV report cited the emeritus pontiff's personal secretary as saying Francis was in Benedict's prayers.
The Vatican said it was not clear if Francis would leave the hospital in time to make his Sunday blessing as usual. The late Pope John Paul led the prayer from the window of his room and even from his bed during several hospitalizations over the course of his 27-year papacy.
Information about Francis's health has come via short Vatican statements, a contrast to John Paul's time, when doctors issued detailed medical bulletins and even held news conferences. The guidance is believed to come directly from the Pope, who guards his privacy more closely than John Paul did.
Francis's hospitalization on Sunday came as a surprise, because only hours earlier he appeared to be in good health when he addressed thousands of people in St. Peter's Square and announced a September trip to Slovakia and Hungary.
Francis is sometimes short of breath, because part of a lung was removed following an illness when he was a young man in his native Argentina.
He also receives regular physiotherapy for sciatica, which causes pain that radiates from the lower back to the legs. The condition forced him to miss several events at the beginning of this year and has led him on occasion to walk with difficulty.
With files from The Associated Press