Two months after the death of
Diego Armando Maradona
and the investigation into it continues.
One of the big names is
Leopoldo Luque
, a personal doctor from '10 and possibly responsible for a
wrongful death
.
The neurosurgeon who operated on the Argentine for a subdural hematoma last October has seen his figure even more compromised after the leak by
Infobae
of some
audios with a partner and
Agustina Cosachov
, Maradona's psychiatrist, also investigated for the death of the Argentine star.
Luque exchanged these audios when he was going to Country San Andrés, where Diego died.
During that time,
Maradona was trying to be revived by the prepaid medical staff.
And Cosachov, who had gone with the psychologist Carlos Díaz to the house of 10 to carry out a routine control,
found the world champion already in cardiorespiratory arrest.
In these messages, the neurosurgeon asked the psychiatrist about Maradona's state of health, at the same time that he told one of his partners what was happening.
"Don't worry, I'm on the highway now. I'll get there ... He seems to be dead. Posta that he's dead,"
says one of Luque's cold messages.
"Barrio San Andrés, you have to go to the one we always go to, Santa María de Tigre. And you have to continue along that street, continue along that street until you find Italia street. It is over Italy. Now I will give you the location later," he
continues.
The most shocking message of all and the one with the greatest lack of feelings is the following:
"Yes idiot, it seems that he did a cardiorespiratory arrest. The fat man is going to shit dying. No idea what he did. I'm already going there, idiot"
.
In the audios exchanged with Cosachov, the psychiatrist tried to tell him what was happening in the Country San Andrés:
"We did it manually, now they are with the team, they are resuscitating him with a line and intubating. But we spent about ten, fifteen minutes doing him us because the ambulance did not arrive
,
"he
says.
"I understand, I understand that this is resuscitation.
But what I'm going for is, are they
resuscitating
him now, are they still resuscitating him? Or are they already intubating him, putting a line on him? Let's say, did he recover his pulse or did he not recover his pulse?
That's what I want to know, if the heart is activated. Let's say,
if he's been CPR for half an hour, he's basically dead
. That's what I want to know, "Luque replied.
Cosachov answers and says the following: "
No, we entered the room and it was cold. Cold, with all the circulation marked. We began to do the resuscitation and he recovered his tone a little and, let's say, he recovered a bit of body temperature
. All that, more or less, was ten minutes. We were doing manual CPR, let's say. Between the nurse, the Negro and me, and Monona. And then the ambulance arrived. Now they are proceeding. They don't tell us. They don't tell us. how is the situation. I left. They don't tell me anything. "
Luque continued asking: "Okay, okay. Okay. And the last thing I ask you ... I'm on my way, I'll be there in forty minutes.
Did you feel her pulse at some point or did she have no pulse at all? whether he recovered his pulse. I know, I imagine that is why they revived him, but he did recover his pulse. Did you ever feel that he had a pulse again or not?
"
In this case, Cosachev replied in writing that he
had felt and "looked dead."
Then the neurosurgeon tried to calm the psychiatrist and told her: "Imagine, calm down. Try to go down. This is so, it is like that.
It is a complex patient, and well, whatever has to happen will happen. We will be there. to bank the one that comes
".
And in other audios, he continued: "
No, yes. That's it. I mean, we did what we had to do, Agustina. The family was there, everyone was aware of everything, everyone in communication. Those things ... They are patients like that, very difficult
. "
"Nothing, all I ask of you is to let me know if they are going from there and where they are going, so I go straight. Everything, of course, if they survive. Because as the situation is, it is complicated. If they stay at home, sometimes because they believe that he would not tolerate a transfer, "
concluded Cosachov.