Story highlights
Manager: Schumacher hit a rock and was catapulted into the air, landed on his head
Schumacher is showing a slight improvement but is not out of danger, doctor says
The former Formula 1 driver had surgery Monday night to relieve pressure on his brain
Schumacher suffered severe head trauma in a skiing accident in the French Alps
Former Formula 1 driver Michael Schumacher, who suffered a serious head injury in a skiing accident, is showing a “slight improvement” in his condition, doctors in France said Tuesday.
On Monday night, doctors carried out a surgical intervention on Schumacher that allowed for some pressure to be relieved on his brain in a way that was “gradual and effective,” said Jean-Francois Payen, head of anesthesiology at the University Hospital Center of Grenoble.
The surgery, which took about two hours, involved the removal of a large hematoma, he said. Schumacher remains in a medically induced coma.
“The situation is better under control than yesterday,” Payen told reporters. “We cannot say that he is out of danger, but we’ve gained a little time in his development. But the hours to come are hours that are crucial in our strategy.”
The surgery came after a scan showed a surprising improvement in Schumacher’s condition Monday afternoon, Payen said.
After consulting with the driver’s family, Schumacher’s doctors decided to seize the “window of opportunity” and operate, he said.
But Payen warned that it was too soon to speculate on Schumacher’s prognosis. “There is still a long way to go,” he said. The driver is still in too fragile a state to be moved to another hospital.
Schumacher, the most successful driver in Formula 1 history, suffered severe head trauma after falling while skiing Sunday in Meribel, in the French Alps.
‘Catapulted onto his head’
His manager, Sabine Kehm, recounted more details Tuesday of how the accident happened, gleaned from friends and family members who were present at the time.
The party was skiing in an area of deep snow when Schumacher helped a friend who had fallen, she said. As he set off again and went to make a turn, he seems to have hit a rock hidden under the snow.
This catapulted him into the air and he fell head down with all his weight onto another rock, she said, resulting in severe injuries to his head.
Schumacher was not traveling fast at the time, Kehm said, so those with him were initially shocked by how badly he was hurt. “It’s not a question of speed but of the angle that you hit the rock,” she said.
Kehm also cautioned against reading too much into the doctors’ latest report.
“They made it very clear that they are not optimistic, that … there was a slight improvement compared to the situation yesterday, which doesn’t mean we can be optimistic yet,” she said. “It’s much too early to say.”
Kehm declined to comment on the emotional state of Schumacher’s family.
But she said “heartwarming” messages of support have come flooding in via e-mails, text messages and letters from people around the world.
In a statement released Tuesday, Schumacher’s family expressed thanks for the outpouring.
“They are giving us great support. We all know he is a fighter and will not give up,” the statement said.
Kehm said a journalist tried to sneak into Schumacher’s hospital room disguised as a priest.
World titles
The accident happened while Schumacher was off-piste – meaning he was on unmarked slopes – in the mountains between Georges Bauduis Piste and La Biche Piste, resort director Christophe Gernignon-Lecomte said. The driver was wearing a helmet at the time.
Schumacher, who turns 45 Friday, won a record seven world titles in his spectacular Formula 1 career and “also holds nearly every scoring record in the book by a considerable margin,” according to the motorsport’s official website.
He dominated the competition for the best part of a decade, winning five world championships in a row between 2000 and 2004. He retired for the first time at the end of the 2006 championship.
He returned to the Formula 1 track with the revived Mercedes team in 2010 but struggled to repeat his earlier glories. His best finish was third place at last year’s European Grand Prix in Valencia, his only podium position in three seasons with the German manufacturer.
He retired from the sport for a second time in 2012.
Schumacher suffered a serious injury once during his career in the high-speed sport, breaking his leg in a crash at the British Grand Prix in 1999.
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CNN’s Laura Smith-Spark wrote and reported in London and Saskya Vandoorne reported from Grenoble. CNN’s Jethro Mullen and Gary Morley contributed to this report.