Nobel laureate Narges Mohammadi needs months of care after collapse in Iran prison, foundation says
Doctors said angiography found major artery blockages and recommended an eight-month course of care in a stress-free setting.
- Nobel Peace laureate Narges Mohammadi requires eight months of treatment following her May 1 prison collapse, doctors said Wednesday, citing her need for permanent care in a stress-free environment.
- Mohammadi's imprisonment began in Mashhad last December, where her family reported she was heavily beaten during her arrest, contributing to her deteriorating health in custody.
- Angiography results revealed two of her main arteries have significant blockage, and doctors identified brain damage causing blood pressure fluctuations that require ongoing monitoring.
- Her foundation and dozens of Nobel Prize laureates have called for the unconditional release of Mohammedi, describing her as a "vocal advocate of human and women's rights."
- Awarded the Nobel in 2023 while jailed, Mohammadi has faced repeated imprisonment throughout her career and suffered a heart attack in March with ongoing blood clot complications.
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Narges Mohammad, who is being treated at a hospital in Tehran, underwent a coronary angiography. The results are worrying, the support foundation says.
Mohammadi's vascular disease continues to progress, the Foundation informs the imprisoned Nobel Peace Prize winner. Iran's justice reports the execution of a man.
Nobel laureate Narges Mohammadi needs months of care after collapse in Iran prison, foundation says
The foundation for Nobel Peace laureate Narges Mohammadi says doctors who’ve examined her after she collapsed at a prison in Iran say she needs months of treatment.
After the transfer of the Iranian Nobel Laureate Narges Mohammadi from prison to a hospital, her foundation reports. Her doctors diagnose the progression of her heart disease.
The doctors, who examined the Nobel Peace Prize 2023 Narges Mohammadi, more than a week after becoming unconscious in an Iranian prison, said that the activist will need months of treatment, indicated today its foundation. An angiography showed that two of its main arteries have a significant obstruction and that vascular disease has worsened considerably since the last procedure to which it was subjected, in 2024, said the foundation in a state…
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