Television pictures showed Van Vleuten slamming into the road
and a stone kerb after losing control of her bike when leading
on the final descent toward Copacabana beach with around 15km of
the race remaining.
She was taken to hospital and put in intensive care, with some
who saw the accident fearing the 33-year-old may have suffered
more severe injuries.
"I am now in the hospital with some injuries and fractures, but
will be fine," Van Vleuten said on Twitter.
"Most of all super disappointed after best race of my career."
Other riders were quick to offer their support.
Australian Gracie Elvin, who also rides for the Orica team along
with Van Vleuten, said she could have been killed.
"I'm still concerned right now but from what we've heard she's
ok," Elvin said on Twitter.
"She's super tough."
It is not the first time Van Vleuten has suffered serious
injuries after a crash.
Last year she was left with three broken ribs, a broken
collarbone and a collapsed lung following a training accident
with a car in Italy.
The Rio course, particularly the Vista Chinesa descent where
Vincenzo Nibali crashed and broke both collarbones on Saturday,
has come under fire.
The sport's governing body (UCI) issued a statement saying Van
Vleuten's was "in stable condition at the intensive care of a
Rio de Janeiro hospital".
The Dutch team's chief medical officer Cees Rein van den
Hoogenband said: "Annemiek went through a total CT scan and is
stable now. She suffers from a heavy concussion but there were
no further abnormalities seen on the scan.
"She will stay in intensive care for the next 24 hours. She is
fully conscious and her reactions are adequate."
Van Vleuten's compatriot Anna van der Breggen won the women's
race.
"Of course if you are riding out front, then maybe you take too
much risk, I don't know," she said.
"It's still a bike race and anything can happen, so maybe it's
just bad luck that happened to her."
On Saturday Nibali was also leading the men's race when he
crashed on the same section of road.
(Additional reporting by Mitch Phillips; Editing by Peter
Rutherford)
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