Monday, May 23, 2011

Source: 'Grease' actor Jeff Conaway's condition 'increasingly grim'

Actor Jeff Conaway is shown at the sixth annual TV Land Awards in Santa Monica, California, in June 2008.Los Angeles -- Actor Jeff Conaway's prospect for recovering from pneumonia and sepsis grew "increasingly grim" as a blood infection re-emerged Sunday, according to a source familiar with Conaway's medical condition.
The same source, who asked not to be identified, described Conaway as being on the "razor's edge" in his fight for life Saturday.
Conaway, 60, who was in the TV series "Taxi" and the movie "Grease" more than three decades ago, was rushed to an Encino, California, hospital on May 11. He apparently had been unconscious for eight or nine hours before he was found, manager Phil Brock said.
Initial reports that he suffered a drug overdose were inaccurate, the source said. However, his use of drugs caused him not to realize how ill he was, keeping him from getting treatment until it was almost too late, the source said.
Conaway's struggle with alcohol and drug addiction was chronicled in 2008 on the TV reality show "Celebrity Rehab With Dr. Drew."
Dr. Drew Pinsky, who treated Conaway on the show, posted Twitter messages after he visited him in the hospital Friday evening.
"He is stable & looks like he will recover from his pneumonia. Not an OD like press is alleging & certainly not dead," Pinsky tweeted.
But on Saturday, Pinsky tweeted a less hopeful message: "We all need to pray for him. Not doing well today suddenly."
Conaway's manager told CNN on Thursday that he believed it was a drug overdose, but the source with knowledge of his condition said the only illness was pneumonia and sepsis.
Pinsky's Twitter postings confirmed the same information. "Pneumonia with sepsis. No evidence of intentional OD," said Pinsky, who hosts the HLN show "Dr. Drew."
Doctors are using the surgical anesthetic propofol to keep Conaway sedated in a medically induced coma, according to Pinsky's tweets. "That also means he's intubated and on a vent," Pinsky tweeted.
The coma is needed to keep the patient from thrashing around, the source said.
"He's a really wonderful soul, a very kind and wonderful person," Brock said.

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