Audio By Carbonatix
Pope Francis is alert after suffering two episodes of "acute respiratory failure" on Monday afternoon, the Vatican has said.
Doctors were forced to intervene to clear mucus from the Pope's lungs, an update from the Holy See said, though it said he was alert throughout.
The 88-year-old pontiff has resumed the use of an oxygen mask and ventilator to assist his breathing, but remains "alert, focused and cooperative", the Vatican said.
This is now the third serious downturn since the 88-year-old pontiff was admitted to the hospital 18 days ago with pneumonia.
On Friday, Pope Francis suffered an "isolated" breathing crisis involving vomiting, the Vatican said.
Updates from the Holy See reported that he responded well to oxygen therapy, with Vatican officials saying on Sunday the Pope no longer required "non-invasive mechanical ventilation, only high-flow oxygen therapy".
Following Monday's episodes, Pope Francis has resumed that mechanical ventilation.
His illness has meant that Pope Francis has been unable to deliver his traditional Angelus prayer in person for three weeks in a row, with the Vatican publishing his written comments instead.
Officials said the text, sent from his hospital room in Rome, had been written "in the past few days". In it, the Pope thanked people for their prayers and thanked his medical team for their care.
He will also miss the procession and mass this Wednesday that mark the first day of Lent, the six-week period leading to Easter.
Hundreds of Catholics gathered outside in St Peter's Square on Monday for an eighth evening to pray for the Pope's health, many carrying rosary beads as they headed across the cobbles towards the Basilica.

The crowd, a mixture of priests and nuns based in Rome and Catholic pilgrims here for a Jubilee year, were led by an American cardinal.
"I come every night to pray, but this night I am pretty worried," Javier, a Romanian priest, voiced the feelings of many on the square. "We still have hope, but it doesn't look good."
"It looks bad, and that's a shame because we really like Francis," Patricia, a Spanish catholic from Toledo, told the BBC.
She was following the prayers with her husband and young daughter.
"He's really opened the doors of the church to many, like LGBT people. I think they will look for a more conservative pope next, to stop the change."
Catholics have also been visiting the Gemelli hospital in Rome to pray for him - hoping he might come to the window, as has happened in the past.
But although the Vatican recently described the Pope's condition as stable, he remains too sick even to greet the crowd below.

The Pope was admitted to hospital on 14 February after experiencing breathing difficulties for several days.
He was first treated for bronchitis before being diagnosed with pneumonia in both lungs.
The pontiff is particularly susceptible to pneumonia, an infection of the lungs that can be caused by bacteria, viruses or fungi, after he contracted pleurisy – an inflammation of the lungs – as a young man and had a partial lung removal.
Vatican sources stress, as they have all along, that the Pope's condition remains complex – his doctors remain cautious - and he is not out of danger.
Latest Stories
-
Asiedu Nketia calls for investigation into cocoa sack procurement under ex-government
20 seconds -
Ghanaians divided over DStv upgrades as government ramps up anti-piracy war
4 minutes -
African exporters face tariff shock as U.S. eyes AGOA Extension Bill
13 minutes -
Vanity, Power, Greed, and the People We Forgot to empower
17 minutes -
Economic recovery puts Ghana on track to end IMF oversight
18 minutes -
Health Minister directs teaching hospitals to operate 24-hour OPD and lab services
38 minutes -
Drivers association warns against excessive sales targets, speeding amid rising road crashes
44 minutes -
Drivers association urges gov’t to invest in alternative transport to curb road crashes
51 minutes -
Dollar demand picks up as businesses restock for the rest of the year
1 hour -
WHO urges higher taxes on tobacco, alcohol, sugary drinksÂ
1 hour -
Legal and constitutional assessment of Ghana’s Gold-For-Reserves Programme
1 hour -
Why Goldbod should not be judged by textbook economics
1 hour -
Surrogate mother delivers quadruplets – Rare in assisted reproductive technology
1 hour -
Global growth to fall to 2.6% in 2026 – World Bank
2 hours -
Prof Frimpong-Boateng not above the party – Nana B
2 hours
