Taipei - Taiwan's leading female ultra-marathon runner has
had to have both legs amputated after blisters on her foot developed
into an infection, press reports said Tuesday.
Chiu Shu-jung, 51, remains in a coma in a French hospital
following the amputation of her left leg on August 31 and of her
right leg on September 1, the China Times daily said.
President Ma Ying-jeou has instructed Taiwan's foreign ministry to
assist the French hospital in saving Chiu's life, the Central News
Agency reported.
Chiu, 51, a mother of two and a clerk at the China Steel Corp,
took part in the annual 1,500-kilometre ultra-marathon race, La
Trans Gaule, between August 13 and 31.
On the 16th day of the 18-day race from Roscoff in north-western
France to Gruissan-Plage on the Mediterranean, blisters on Chiu's
left foot broke. However, she continued to run and finished 17th of
the 44 runners to complete the race.
Chiu was diagnosed with septicaemia, a potentially
life-threatening infection, and was flown by helicopter to a hospital
in Montpellier.
Doctors removed her left leg and the sole of her right foot on
August 31, and amputated her right leg on September 1 to stop the
infection from spreading.
Chiu, nicknamed 'ultra-marathon mama', had been scheduled to join
an ultra-marathon event in South Korea after the race in France.
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