Investigators
 revealed today that medical sign-off notes were found at Lubitz's home -
 including two for the day of the crash - and Dusseldorf University 
Hospital confirmed he had been a patient there over the past two months,
 although it would not disclose his  condition. 
Investigators at the crash site today revealed they have 
retrieved more than 400 body parts belonging to the victims - but have 
not found an intact body. Police have now asked friends and families of 
the deceased to provide DNA samples as they start the grim task of 
identifying those who lost their lives 
Described 
as a man whose life-long obsession had been to become a pilot, it has 
been suggested he may have feared his flying licence  might not be 
renewed on medical grounds.
Friends
 have told how Lubitz had a life-long obsession with flight, posting 
pictures of planes all over his walls as a child and taking gliding 
lessons at the age of just 14. 
Lubitz
 had built his whole life around becoming a pilot - with one friend 
saying 'would have died' if he had not have passed his flying exams - 
and even became a flight attendant while he waited to start his 
training.
He
 was facing a potential medical examination that could have seen his 
pilot's licence removed and it is thought he may have feared mental or 
other health problems would bring an end to his dream.
Former
 BA pilot Alastair Rosenschein said pilots of Lubitz's age face regular 
medicals as well as simulator tests and can be grounded if they fail to 
pass. He told MailOnline: 'He may have known that his career was already
 over. He may have known that the end was in sight.'



 
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