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» » Dutch Prince Friso seriously brain-damaged after skiing accident

Dutch Prince Friso seriously brain-damaged after skiing accident



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"Praise for the Royal Family Of Netherland"







Open Letter to The Royal family



Dear Her Majesty Queen Beatrix Of Netherland,


We hope you are remaining strong hearted for your dear and loving son, Prince Willem-Friso, and his family.



Dear Madam, on behalf of His Royal Highness Sri Paduka Batara Mahasari Maulana General, Dr. Datu Muhammaul 'Ali Al-Mahmoun, Head of the Royal Family Of Maharaja Adinda Adinda Aranan and the Sulu Royal Family, I would like wish your beautiful son all the very best, for a speedy recovery. May God protect Him, and may God bring peace to your anxious heart.
Love and Peace in Islam,


Sincere Regards,


His Royal Excellency Datu Paduka David John Brasier @ 

Sayyid Daoud Abdurrahman, DKDRS.

(The Royal Ambassador Of The Royal House In United Kingdom,
Head Of Informations Department)




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latimes.com

This post has been corrected. See note at the bottom for details.
REPORTING FROM LONDON -- Dutch Prince Johan Friso suffered irreversible brain damage after being buried in an avalanche while skiing in the Austrian Alps a week ago and may never regain consciousness, doctors said Friday.
The 43-year-old prince, second son of Queen Beatrix of the Netherlands, was skiing with friends in the Voralberg region of Austria when the avalanche struck. He lay trapped under snow for around 15 minutes before being rescued and airlifted to a nearby hospital last week.
"Because he was under the snow for such a long time, his brain did not get enough oxygen," Dr. Wolfgang Koller, head of the trauma unit at Innsbruck University Hospital, told a news conference Friday.
"We can’t tell for certain if Prince Friso will wake up from his unconscious state," Koller said.
After the accident, Prince Friso suffered a 50-minute cardiac arrest while doctors tried to resuscitate him, hoping that a state of hypothermia would protect him from brain damage.  
"Fifty minutes of resuscitation is a very long time, you could even say too long, but we hoped the hypothermia the patient had would protect him from brain damage," Koller said. "Unfortunately, this didn’t happen."
The team wasn't able to do an MRI scan to ascertain the extent of the damage until Thursday, Kollner said.
"Neurological treatment will be needed for months, if not for years," Kollner predicted.
The prince’s family, including his mother, brother Crown Prince Willem Alexander and wife Princess Mabel, has visited the hospital and Kollner told journalists the family would seek a clinic to continue private treatment.
Since his marriage in 2004, Prince Friso has worked on boards of charities and as an investment banker. Today, he is chief financial officer of Eurenco, a uranium-enrichment consortium. 
He and his wife and their two daughters, Luana, 6, and Zaria, 5, live in London as low-profile members of the Dutch royal family.
He is no longer in line for the throne because they married without the parliamentary approval necessary for royal family members to keep their right to succession. 
[For the record, 12:46 p.m. Feb. 24: An earlier version of this post said Prince Friso had suffered a 5-minute cardiac arrest. It was a 50-minute cardiac arrest.]













 
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