New comments by the doctor who supervised the autopsy of Princess Diana on August 31, 1997, angered the pioneers of social networking, especially when he said her life could have been saved.

Dr. Richard Shepard said the injury to Diana was so unusual that he had not seen any of the 23,000 autopsies he had done during his career.

She said that more attention to Princess Diana during the ambulance could have saved her life instead of assuming the paramedics at the time that her condition was stable, but he explained in his new book "abnormal causes": "In the ambulance, gradually lost consciousness. "I have never had a heart attack, and I have had surgery in the hospital, where they found the problem and tried to repair the vein, but unfortunately it was too late.

"As for the ambulance service, Diana initially appeared infected but her condition was stable, especially since she was able to communicate," according to the Web site of Mail Online.

"Princess Diana suffered a bone fracture after the incident and a small chest injury, including a small tear in one of her lungs," Shepard said.

The British heart surgeon, Christian Barnard, supported Shepard's words in an interview with The Sunday Telegraph: "They made a mistake not to transfer them to the hospital quickly, because the bleeding suffered by Diana can only be stopped by surgery."