US President Donald Trump is in “exceptional health”, his doctor said after he underwent a check-up that included lab tests and preventive health assessments at Walter Reed National Military Medical Centre.
Mr Trump spent roughly three hours at the hospital in Bethesda, Maryland, for what his doctor, Navy Captain Sean Barbabella, called a “scheduled follow-up evaluation” that was a “part of his ongoing health maintenance plan”.
While there, the president also got his yearly flu shot, as well as a Covid-19 booster vaccine.
President Donald Trump speaks in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington (Alex Brandon/AP)
“President Donald J Trump remains in exceptional health, exhibiting strong cardiovascular, pulmonary, neurological and physical performance,” Capt Barbabella wrote in a one-page memo released by the White House.
The doctor noted in the memo that the evaluation helped prepare for Mr Trump’s upcoming overseas trips and included advanced imaging, lab testing and preventive health assessments.
The president is travelling to the Middle East this weekend and is scheduled to fly to Asia at the end of this month.
Capt Barbabella also said he evaluated Mr Trump’s cardiac age, which was about 14 years younger than his chronological age.
Mr Trump is 79 and was the oldest US president at his inauguration.
The White House this week initially described Mr Trump’s Walter Reed visit as a “routine yearly check-up”, although he had his annual physical in April.
The president then called it a “semi-annual physical”.
Mr Trump’s April physical found that he was “fully fit” to serve as commander in chief.
The three-page summary of the exam done by Capt Barbabella then said he had lost 20lbs (nine kilograms) since a medical exam in June 2020 and said he has an “active lifestyle” that “continues to contribute significantly” to the wellbeing of the president.
In July, the White House announced that Mr Trump had recently undergone a medical check-up after noticing “mild swelling” in his lower legs and was found to have a condition common in older adults that causes blood to pool in his veins.
President Donald Trump gives a thumbs-up (Alex Brandon/AP)
Tests by the White House medical unit showed that Mr Trump has chronic venous insufficiency, which occurs when little valves inside the veins that normally help move blood against gravity gradually lose the ability to work properly.
At the April physical, Mr Trump also passed a short screening test to assess different brain functions.
Presidents have large discretion over what health information they choose to release to the public.
Mr Trump’s summary from his April exam included information about his weight, body mass index, past surgeries, mental health screenings, cholesterol levels and blood pressure.
When spokesperson Karoline Leavitt discussed the results of his chronic venous insufficiency diagnosis from the briefing room, she noted that the White House was disclosing details of the check-up to dispel rumours about Mr Trump’s health.
At the time, Mr Trump was frequently observed with bruising on his hand.
The Republican president has also repeatedly used the issue of health as a political cudgel.
He repeatedly questioned the mental and physical health of his Democratic predecessor Joe Biden, and pointed out that he has undergone cognitive testing that Mr Biden had not.
Mr Biden has brushed aside those criticisms and said he was fit to serve, but he dropped out of the 2024 race for the White House after a disastrous debate with Mr Trump raised doubts about his fitness for office.