Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

Bolsonaro Remains In ICU As Inflammation Rises


(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Key Points

- Former President Jair Bolsonaro remains in the ICU at DF Star Hospital in Brasília with bilateral bacterial bronchopneumonia caused by aspiration, with rising inflammatory markers prompting doctors to expand antibiotic treatment

- The 70-year-old was transferred from Papuda prison on March 13 after experiencing high fever, low oxygen saturation, chills, and vomiting

- Bolsonaro is serving a 27-year sentence for his role in a coup attempt, while his son Flávio runs as opposition presidential candidate with polls showing a virtual tie against President Lula

The Bolsonaro hospitalization entered its fourth day on Sunday with the former Brazilian president still in the intensive care unit and doctors escalating his treatment after blood tests showed a new rise in inflammatory markers. DF Star Hospital in Brasília reported that Bolsonaro, 70, showed improved kidney function compared to the previous day but that the worsening inflammation required expanded antibiotic coverage. There is no forecast for discharge. The former president has been in the ICU since March 13, when he was transferred from Papuda federal prison after waking with high fever, low oxygen saturation, chills, and severe vomiting. The Rio Times covers Brazil financial news English and the political developments that shape Latin America's largest democracy.

Bolsonaro Hospitalization: Medical Details

Hospital bulletins describe Bolsonaro's condition as bilateral bacterial bronchopneumonia resulting from a bronchoaspiration episode - a complication in which material is inhaled into the lungs, causing infection. His treating physician, cardiologist Brasil Caiado, told reporters on Friday that pneumonia in patients over 70 is always serious because it carries the risk of progressing to septicemia, where bacteria enter the bloodstream. Bolsonaro is receiving intravenous antibiotics and non-invasive clinical support, and Caiado said it was unlikely the former president would return to prison in the coming days because the treatment requires a hospital setting.

Bolsonaro has been hospitalized multiple times since a near-fatal stabbing at a 2018 campaign rally that caused severe abdominal injuries requiring several surgeries. In January 2026, he was escorted to the same hospital for brain tests after falling from his bed in his cell. His health history has become a recurring point of contention between his legal team, which has repeatedly asked the Supreme Court for house arrest on humanitarian grounds, and prosecutors who argue the prison system can accommodate his medical needs. The court transferred him to a larger cell in January but has not granted the house arrest request.

Political Context: Election Year and the Bolsonaro Legacy

The Bolsonaro hospitalization comes at a charged political moment. Bolsonaro is serving 27 years and three months after being convicted in September 2025 by a Supreme Court panel for his role in a failed coup attempt following his 2022 election defeat to President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silv. The conviction covered charges including leading an armed criminal organization, plotting to kill Lula, Vice President Geraldo Alckmin, and Supreme Court Justice Alexandre de Moraes, and attempting the violent abolition of democratic rule. Bolsonaro has denied all wrongdoing and maintains he is a political prisoner. His case drew renewed international attention when President Trump imposed tariffs on Brazil partly in response to what he called a “witch hunt” against his ally, though most of those tariffs have since been removed.

Barred from running, Bolsonaro has designated his son Flávio, a senator from the Partido Liberal, as the opposition's presidential candidate for the October election. Recent polls show Flávio Bolsonaro and Lula in a virtual tie in second-round simulations, making the elder Bolsonaro's health and imprisonment a persistent backdrop to the campaign. Flávio visited the hospital on Friday and told reporters his father's life was being put at risk by continued imprisonment, calling for humanitarian house arrest. The Supreme Court has given no indication it will reconsider, and the political standoff between the judiciary and the Bolsonaro movement shows no sign of abating as the election approaches.

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The Rio Times

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