PTI
Islamabad
Pakistanâs incarcerated former prime minister Imran Khan on early Tuesday was taken from jail to a hospital here for treatment of an eye ailment and later shifted back, officials said.
Khan was diagnosed last month with right central retinal vein occlusion (CRVO) affecting his vision.
He was brought to the Pakistan Institute of Medical Sciences (PIMS) for a second dose of anti-VEGF intravitreal injection, a doctor at the hospital said. He had received treatment earlier on January 24.
âPrior to the procedure, he was examined by a board of specialists: a consultant cardiologist who also performed echocardiography and ECG (result: normal) and a consultant physician.
âAfter obtaining informed consent, and under standard monitoring, precautionary measures and protocols in the operation theatre, he was injected with a second dose of intravitreal injection of anti-VEGF under the guidance of microscopy by consultant ophthalmologist, and a consultant vitreo-retinal surgeon of PIMS and Al-Shifa Eye Hospital,â the doctor said.
The procedure was carried out as a day-care surgery and Khanâs vitals remained stable throughout, the doctor added. He was discharged after the procedure with instructions for care and follow-up.
PIMS is a leading public hospital, while Rawalpindi-based Al-Shifa Trust Eye Hospital is a prestigious eye hospital run by a private trust.
Earlier, Khanâs family and his party, Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI), had demanded that he be treated at Shifa International Hospital, a private facility in Islamabad.
Parliamentary Affairs Minister Tariq Fazal Chaudhry said it was ânecessary to clarify that the government took him (Khan) to PIMS under strict security arrangements while fulfilling all legal and humanitarian requirementsâ.
âAccording to doctorsâ instructions, there was an improvement in the eyesight after the first procedure, keeping in view which expert physicians recommended a second procedure. Todayâs process was completed successfully and after clearance from the medical team, he was shifted back to Adiala,â he posted on social media.
Chaudhry reaffirmed that providing medical facilities to prisoners was the responsibility of the state and said all arrangements were made transparently and in accordance with regulations. He added that Khan would be administered a third injection on March 24.
Meanwhile, PTI demanded âtransparency, not secrecyâ in Khanâs treatment and reiterated its call for him to be shifted to Shifa International Hospital for what it described as independent and transparent medical care.
In a social media post, Khanâs sister Aleema Khanum said: âWe do not trust the diagnosis or test reports from government medical facilities.â