Mohammed al-Beltagy, a leading figure in the Muslim Brotherhood, said he suffered a stroke on January 15, which led to the fall of his right hand and the deflection of his tongue.

He added that he had been supposed to have a magnetic resonance to the brain since the onset of symptoms, according to the recommendation of the doctor who was a medical examination, and was supposed to have a radiation ultrasound on the neck, which has not been done so far.

El-Beltagy asked the court to present him to the university's Kasr al-Aini hospital so that neurologists could diagnose his condition.

Earlier on Friday, the Baltaji family blamed the Egyptian regime for his life and what he was subjected to in the prison of the scorpion south of Cairo.

The family said in a statement that his health is worsening and that he suffered a stroke that affected him in the last session of his trial, stressing that she did not know when he was injured or the measures taken to treat him, especially with the prevention of the visit and communication between detainees of the prison of Scorpio and their relatives for the third year on Respectively.

Al-Beltagy accused the judiciary of being biased against him, refusing to hear his complaint or even hearing his lawyer's demands for urgent medical measures to provide care and treatment.

"The Al-Beltagy family holds the Egyptian regime - in particular the Ministry of the Interior, the Prisons Service and the Attorney General - fully responsible for the life of Dr. El-Beltagy, and demands that they be immediately transferred to medical doctors, even at the expense of his family. The Egyptian authorities to put pressure on them in order to preserve the life of Dr. and hundreds of others suffer from various violations, including medical negligence, which claimed the lives of many.

El-Beltagy, a former parliamentarian and a leading figure in the Muslim Brotherhood, faces final sentences for 60 years in three cases, while others have been sentenced to death and life imprisonment in other cases.

Human rights groups say detainees in the heavily guarded Scorpio prison face human rights violations, which the Egyptian authorities deny.