Marchionne Secret: Ongoing Shoulder Pain From Cancer - Suffered Catastrophic Embolism During Corrective Surgery; Now On Life Support
Zurich July 24, 2018; Former Fiat Chrysler Automobiles CEO Sergio Marchionne suffered an embolism while undergoing an operation for an invasive shoulder sarcoma and has irreversible damage to his brain function, and he had failed to tell Exor Chairman John Elkann of the seriousness of his illness, an Italian business website reported Tuesday.
Lettera43, in an exclusive report Tuesday citing anonymous sources, said Marchionne, 66, had been diagnosed “long ago” with the invasive shoulder sarcoma — a malignant form of cancer that can develop in the body’s soft tissue — and “expressed some doubts” about the effectiveness of the high-risk operation he underwent at the University of Zurich in late June.
Sources told Lettera43, which has led coverage of Marchionne’s illness, that during the operation, Marchionne was struck by a cerebral embolism, plunging him into a coma. It also claims that Marchionne is now being kept alive only by machines, and that doctors said there was no hope of recovery.
According to the American Heart Association, an embolism occurs when a blood clot or piece of fatty plaque breaks loose and travels through the bloodstream and becomes lodged in a blood vessel and blocks blood flow.
When an embolism blocks the flow of blood to the brain, it is called a cerebral embolism, a type of stroke.
Lettera43 says Marchionne suffered for some time from “severe shoulder pain that made arm movements difficult,” according to a translation, and that he took cortisone to soothe them. It says that Marchionne also suffered from a chronic thyroid condition for which he had been taking medications for an extended period, which other sources have told Automotive News