Johnny Esposito is the last person to meet Maradona before he passed away. Having breakfast with his nephew, Maradona said: "He doesn't feel well", then went to bed.
After that, when the doctor came to see him as scheduled and discovered Maradona unconscious, he rushed to call an ambulance but it was too late, he had passed away at the time of the bus - The Sun reported.
The final hours of the Argentina football legend's short life, the former Napoli and Barcelona star, were posted in the Argentine media when an autopsy showed he had passed away from a heart attack.
According to an article in the Argentine press, Maradona woke up in the morning looking pale and said he felt cold.
He returned to bed after a quick breakfast and is said to have said his last words to his nephew: "Me siento mal - You don't feel well".
Doctors tried to provide emergency care when they arrived but were unsuccessful.
The Argentine prosecutor said Maradona passed away at around noon on November 25. Preliminary autopsy results showed that he died in sleep after suffering from heart failure that caused pulmonary edema.
The exam is also said to have discovered expanded myocardial disease, a condition in which the heart muscle becomes weak and bulges, unable to pump enough blood to the rest of the body.
Psychologist Carlos Diaz and Dr. Agustina Cosachov have been renting Maradona's house since being discharged from the hospital after brain surgery in early November.
They went to his bedroom on the ground floor and talked to him but he didnt answer, so they asked his nephew and an assistant to come into the room, the report leaked to the Argentine media.
They tried to wake him up and, after seeing no signs of survival, tried to breathe artificially but failed, the reports added. The first first first first responders to the scene, along with a nearby surgeon, used adrenaline and atropine, a prescription drug used to treat symptoms of a low heart rate.
Maradona's former doctor Alfredo Cahe - who worked with Maradona for 30 years - had previously questioned the decision to transfer the football legend from the hospital on 11 November.
"Diego hasn't been taken care of as he should have been," he told the Argentine news program Telefe Noticias. He should have been cared for in the hospital, not taken to a house that was not well prepared.