German media writes about Valon Krasniqi, who won the battle with the coronavirus and woke up from the coma

The day Valon Krasniqi's life changed forever is 17 August. Krasniqi, 30, a muscular, enthusiastic motorcyclist, had just returned to Germany from his family vacation in Albania when he suddenly did not feel well. A Corleone test found that he and his older sister were infected with Covid-19. But while the sister showed only [...]
But while the sister showed only slight symptoms, Covid-19 hit Valon Krasniqi hard and hard. He had not been vaccinated a few weeks earlier he had tried to set up a meeting, but at that time the vaccine was still in absentia and was said to have to be given senior priority, reports the German television network, WDR.
She had a high fever for days and could barely eat or drink. Then he could hardly breathe. His family called the ambulance that took him to a clinic in Krasniqi's hometown of Bergheim.
Urgent Operation in a Week
But even there doctors and nurses had to see how the 30-year-old situation deteriorated rapidly. A week later he also took a trumpet on his right and moved to the hospital St. Vincent to Koln. On August 26, doctors there performed an urgent operation to save their lives.
And the same evening that I was operated, they artificially put me in a coma”, Krasniqi says in a low voice nearly four months later. The well - trained man, who once weighed 93kg, is now just a shadow of himself, Krasniqi is weakened to about 65kg. The white ones of his eyes have turned yellow because his liver chaptered before the many drugs Krasniqi has taken in recent months, writes the German medium, broadcast Express.
But Krasniqi smiles. He survived.
Five weeks in a coma, nearly ten weeks in artificial breathing
The fight with the virus really started in a coma. At the moment, 30-year-old lungs are so weak that doctors need to breathe artificially. Until November 2nd, nearly ten weeks, Krasniqi remains dependent on ECMO A kind of artificial lung that supplies blood with oxygen. Even when the medical team was able to get him out of a coma in five weeks, he remained attached to the camera.
There is also the family that strengthens the young man. His wife and sister do everything they can to make the 30-year-old feel that his family is near him. And he gets support from the care team in the intensive care unit.
“When I was in a venerable state, nurses kept voices in my ears from my family, especially from my wife and sister”, Krasniqi says.
His wife mainly uses visits to decorate the hospital room with pictures of relatives and friends. She closes photos and letters that Krasniqi's grandchildren and grandchildren write about. All of this should motivate him to get well.
Mr. Case Krasniqi is a major success story”, says Professor Christian Strasburg, who is currently treating him at the University of Bonn Hospital. Because of his positive nature, he also facilitates the work of doctors and nurses.
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