"I still have a lot of work to do to walk again" : Matthieu Lartot reports his leg amputated

"I still have a lot of work to do to walk again" : Matthieu Lartot reports his leg amputated

On Friday, July 7, Matthieu Lartot, who had recently undergone major surgery, evaluated his battle with cancer.

Matthieu Lartot continues his long fight against the disease. On April 18, a journalist from France Télévisions announced on his Instagram account that his knee cancer had relapsed: “Today I had to drop the antenna to get back in the ring and fight cancer for the second time!“The rugby expert had already dealt with this disease in adolescence:”26 years later, history is unfortunately misfiring. The odds of this happening were 1-5%, and it did. It’s going to shake very hard, but I’m ready and well surrounded.Later, the 43-year-old man appeared in the newspaper’s columns. olympic noon he said he was going to have a severe surgical operation, an amputation: “To be honest, I take this as a let-go. Besides, I’ve been doing this in my head for years. The lifespan of the prosthesis I wore for 25 years was limited and my leg was too damaged to buy a new one. So I knew the amputation would happen sooner or later. But there is a gap that I cannot control between preparing for this psychologically and waking up with the loss of a limb after the operation… But the important thing is the struggle for life; It’s not a question of holding my leg.

On Friday, July 7, Matthieu Lartot made the news. Despite his amputation, the journalist said reassuring words on his Instagram account: “Straight! The road to rehab started two weeks ago and morale is high! The amputation went well and the results of the anapath fell 2 days ago: they are excellent. Chemotherapy worked, and surgery did the rest.“The native of Mantes-la-Jolie is still determined not to catch fire, and he’s taking one scene after another:”It’s not a quick victory because this bloody disease is insidious but its cures are over and from now on it will be a simple follow up every 3 months for 5 years. Until then, I have a lot of work to do to walk again, but I give my all to do my best every day. You have to know how to take advantage of the small progress every day, step by step… After spending 1 month at the clinic and rehab center this weekend, I will be able to get my first ‘permit’ to find my family at home. Long live sport and long live rugby!

Check out this post on Instagram

A post shared by Matthieu Lartot (@matthieulartot)

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Source: Programme Television

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