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Pope awake after spending first night in hospital following surgery

‘The night went well,’ Vatican spokesman Matteo Bruni said.

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Rome’s Agostino Gemelli University Polyclinic

Pope Francis is awake after a good first night in hospital following a three-hour operation to remove intestinal scar tissue and repair a hernia in his abdominal wall.

“The night went well,” Vatican spokesman Matteo Bruni said in a statement early on Thursday, saying further updates will be released later.

Dr Sergio Alfieri, director of abdominal and endocrine sciences at Rome’s Gemelli hospital, said Wednesday’s operation was successful and there were no complications or other pathologies discovered.

Dr Alfieri, who also removed part of Francis’s colon in 2021, told an evening press conference the Pope is awake, alert and even joking.

“When will we do the third one?” he quoted Francis as saying.

The pontiff is expected to remain in the 10th floor papal suite at Gemelli for several days and all papal audiences have been cancelled until June 18.

The Vatican is expected to provide a medical update later on Thursday.

The operation was scheduled after Francis complained about increasing bouts of pain and intestinal blockages.

After going to Gemelli on Tuesday for checks, he was admitted on Wednesday after his general audience and underwent the procedure shortly after.

The surgery was likely scheduled for now to give Francis plenty of time to recover before embarking on planned travel later this summer: an August 2-6 trip to Portugal for World Youth Day and an August 31-September 4 trip to Mongolia.

During the operation, doctors removed adhesions, or internal scarring, on the intestine that had caused a partial blockage.

Dr Alfieri revealed that in addition to the 2021 colon surgery, Francis had undergone previous abdominal surgeries sometime before 2013 in his native Argentina, which had also caused scarring.

Vatican Pope who’s In Charge
Pope Francis on Wednesday (Andrew Medichini/AP)

To repair the hernia that had formed over a previous scar, a prosthetic mesh was placed in the abdominal wall, Dr Alfieri said.

He said the Pope is suffering from no other pathologies, that the tissue removed was benign and that after he recovers, he should be fine.

A feared protrusion, or bulging of the intestine through the hernia tear, was apparently not found.

“It appears they operated on him in a timely fashion with no compromise to his intestine,” said Dr Walter Longo, chief of colon and rectal surgery at Yale University School of Medicine, who did not participate in the surgery and commented after consulting the Vatican statement on the procedure.

Francis remained in charge of the Vatican and the 1.3-billion strong Catholic Church even while unconscious and in hospital, according to canon law.

In July 2021, Francis spent 10 days at Gemelli to remove 33 centimetres of his large intestine.

In January this year, Francis said the diverticulosis, or bulges in his intestinal wall, that prompted that surgery had returned.

After that surgery, Francis lamented that he had not responded well to the general anaesthetic.

That reaction in part explained his refusal to have surgery to repair strained knee ligaments that have forced him to use a wheelchair and walker for over a year.

However, Dr Alfieri said Francis had no clinically adverse reactions to the anaesthesia in 2021 or Wednesday.

“Clearly no one likes to be operated on and put to sleep because the moment we’re put under, we lose consciousness,” he said.

“But there was no physiological problem two years ago or today.”

Dr Manish Chand, a professor of surgery at University College London who specialises in colorectal surgery, said the greatest issue now will be pain management and making sure the wound heals properly.

“In the first six weeks after this type of surgery, you’re at risk of getting a recurrence again,” he said.

To avoid that, patients are advised not to do anything strenuous.

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