Schumacher contracts pneumonia – reports (Update)
Reports about the seven-time World Champions' condition surfaced late Tuesday night after German publication Bild claimed that Schumacher had contracted pneumonia while he was in a medically induced coma.
However, Kehm dismissed the claims on Wednesday.
"As always, my answer is: announcements about Schumacher's health status, that are not done by his official doctors or by his management need to be treated as speculation," she told German news agency DPA.
Following his skiing accident in December last year, Schumacher has been in a critical condition, and although his sedation is gradually being reduced in order to try and wake him from his coma, chances of him making a full recovery are ever diminishing.
"Every day, every week in a coma the chances decline that the situation is improving," University of Bordeaux professor of neurology Jean-Marc Orgogozo told the Daily Mirror.
02/12/14 (GMM) F1 legend Michael Schumacher, in a coma since his skiing fall late last year, is now reportedly suffering from pneumonia.
The major German daily Bild-Zeiting said that two and a half weeks since doctors began trying to wake him, the former Ferrari and Mercedes driver is now on antibiotics to treat the lung condition.
"The consequences are not yet clear," the newspaper's correspondents said.
"Whether the waking up process was stopped because of the infection is not known."
Schumacher's manager Sabine Kehm said: "We do not comment on speculation."
Professor Heinzpeter Moecke, of a Hamburg hospital, told Bild: "Pneumonia is generally a serious and dangerous disease, because the body is supplied with less oxygen and is weaker."
He said comatose patients sometimes contract pneumonia because ventilation prevents coughing.
"A healthy person coughs or swallows several times per minute, usually without noticing it. This protects the lungs," said Moecke.
Schumacher's former Ferrari teammate Felipe Massa told reporters in Sao Paulo this week that he recently visited his friend in the Grenoble hospital.
"I went to see him on a day when there was nobody from the press there.
"I stayed by his side for a long time," said Massa. "It was good to be there.
"It just looked like he was sleeping, like any of us sleeps.
"I'm really hopeful everything will be ok and that he will wake up and recover fully," said the Williams driver.
Massa said he is receiving daily updates from the Schumacher circle about the great German's condition.