Close X
Thursday, January 16, 2025
ADVT 
International

Doctors: Pneumonia Is Serious But Clinton Should Bounce Back

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 12 Sep, 2016 12:53 PM
    NEW YORK — Hillary Clinton's diagnosis of pneumonia is a serious concern, but something from which she soon should recover, several doctors and medical experts said Sunday.
     
    Clinton, 68, unexpectedly left a 9-11 anniversary ceremony in New York after she became "overheated and dehydrated," her doctor said. Clinton went to her daughter's nearby apartment for a short stay, and emerged before noon to tell reporters, "I'm feeling great."
     
    Several hours later, Clinton's physician said the Democratic presidential nominee was diagnosed on Friday with pneumonia. "She was put on antibiotics, and advised to rest and modify her schedule," said Dr. Lisa R. Bardack, an internist who practices near Clinton's suburban New York home.
     
    Bardack added in a statement that Clinton, after an exam Sunday afternoon at her home, "is now rehydrated and recovering nicely."
     
    A look at pneumonia and Clinton's health history.
     
     
    WHAT IS PNEUMONIA?
     
    Pneumonia is an infection of the lungs. Often it's a bacterial infection that sweeps in after a cold or flu virus. Each year, about 1 million people in the United States seek hospital care because of pneumonia, and it causes tens of thousands of deaths, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
     
    A presidential candidate is at high risk for such an infection, said Dr. William Schaffner, an infectious disease expert at Vanderbilt University.
     
    "Candidates are constantly out in enclosed spaces, face to face with myriads of people," he said. "It's an ideal opportunity for the transmission of a respiratory virus."
     
    Added Dr. Stephen Hargarten, head of emergency medicine at the Medical College of Wisconsin: "I'm not surprised to hear this happen to someone engaged in the kind of frenetic schedule she has."
     
     
    HOW IS IT TREATED?
     
    Pneumonia is commonly treated quickly and effectively with antibiotics. Speaking generally and not about Clinton's case, Schaffner said patients with a mild pneumonia can recover with antibiotics, a few days of rest and good hydration. That's especially true of someone who does strenuous work, such as a rigorous campaign schedule.
     
    Based on the available information, he said, "this should not in any way impede her function going forward."
     
    But Clinton does need to take it seriously, some experts said.
     
    People over age 65 have a harder time returning to normal than do younger patients. Many people her age need a week or more to recover from even a mild case of pneumonia, said Dr. Sharon Bergquist, an Emory University assistant professor of medicine who specializes in internal medicine.
     
    "The body needs rest. The more she pushes, the harder it is for her to recover," she said.
     
     
    CLINTON'S RECENT HEALTH ISSUES
     
    Clinton had a coughing fit while campaigning in Cleveland early last week. It was dismissed by her aides as allergies and by Clinton herself at that moment as stemming from "talking so much."
     
    It's possible Clinton may have assumed that symptoms from an earlier viral infection were due to allergies, Schaffner said.
     
    Clinton takes antihistamines, which can "dry you out," and dehydration leads to a person being susceptible to heat exhaustion, Bergquist said.
     
    Add in the possibility of fever, shortness of breath or other possible symptoms from pneumonia, and you have a constellation of factors that could have explained her feeling weak on Sunday, she said.
     
     
    CLINTON'S MEDICAL HISTORY
     
    Last year, Clinton's campaign released a letter from Bardack attesting to the former secretary of state's good health. The most notable events in Clinton's medical record included deep vein thrombosis - or a blood clot, usually in the leg - in 1998 and 2009, a broken elbow in 2009 and a concussion in 2012.
     
    Clinton got a stomach virus while travelling in 2012 that left her so dehyrdated that she fainted. She had a concussion that fall, and doctors treating her found a blood clot in a vein in the space between the brain and the skull behind her right ear. Clinton spent a few days in New York-Presbyterian Hospital for treatment and took a monthlong absence from her role as secretary of state.
     
    Bardack said testing the following year showed "complete resolution" of the concussion's effects, including double vision, for which Clinton wore glasses with specialized lenses to address.
     
     
    Other details from Bardack's letter included:
     
    —Clinton's blood pressure was 100 over 65. Her total cholesterol was 195; her LDL or "bad" cholesterol was 118, and her HDL or "good" cholesterol was 64 - all within healthy levels and not signalling the need for any medications.
     
    —She had full cardiac testing, including an ultrasound exam of arteries in her neck, and all was well.
     
    —Clinton has been diagnosed with hypothyroidism, a common condition in women older than 60, in which the thyroid gland doesn't produce enough of certain important hormones.
     
    —Clinton's current medications include Armour Thyroid, a thyroid hormone replacement, and antihistamines, vitamin B12 and a blood thinner named Coumadin.

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Indian Lover Sentenced For 3 Years On Charges Of ‘Spying’ In Pakistan

    Indian Lover Sentenced For 3 Years On Charges Of ‘Spying’ In Pakistan
    Indian national Hamid Nehal Ansari, who went missing after illegally entering Pakistan over three years ago to meet his Pakistani girlfriend, has been jailed for three years for espionage.

    Indian Lover Sentenced For 3 Years On Charges Of ‘Spying’ In Pakistan

    Watch: Now, India's Jadavpur Varsity Students Raise Pro-Afzal And 'Azadi' Slogans

    Watch: Now, India's Jadavpur Varsity Students Raise Pro-Afzal And 'Azadi' Slogans
    Amid the row over anti-India slogans at Jawaharlal Nehru University (JNU) in Delhi, slogans eulogising parliament attack mastermind Afzal Guru and demands for "azadi" echoed in Jadavpur University here on Tuesday.

    Watch: Now, India's Jadavpur Varsity Students Raise Pro-Afzal And 'Azadi' Slogans

    Indian-Origin Student Ishaan Patel's Charity, Planting Pencils, Honoured In USA

    Indian-Origin Student Ishaan Patel's Charity, Planting Pencils, Honoured In USA
    Ishaan Patel, founder of Planting Pencils, was recently honoured by the Milan Cultural Organisation during the Republic Day celebration in the legislative office building in downtown Hartford

    Indian-Origin Student Ishaan Patel's Charity, Planting Pencils, Honoured In USA

    Chandigarh Born Judge Srikanth Srinivasan Seen As Obama's Choice For New US Apex Court Justice

    Chandigarh Born Judge Srikanth Srinivasan Seen As Obama's Choice For New US Apex Court Justice
    Srikanth Srinivasan, 48, who became a judge of the US Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit -- a traditional launching pad for Supreme Court nominees - in May 2013 after a 97-0 Senate vote was on the short-list of many in the media.

    Chandigarh Born Judge Srikanth Srinivasan Seen As Obama's Choice For New US Apex Court Justice

    Who Is 'The Perfect Candidate', Wonders Indian-American Author Tamraparni Dasu

    Who Is 'The Perfect Candidate', Wonders Indian-American Author Tamraparni Dasu
    An Indian-American author of a new novel about a former spy-turned-politician has a piece of advice for Republican presidential front-runner Donald Trump: "Veer to the centre, and pick a positive, uplifting message."

    Who Is 'The Perfect Candidate', Wonders Indian-American Author Tamraparni Dasu

    Indian Restaurant Chain Masala's $34 Million Assets Seized In New Zealand After Allegations Of Fraud

    Indian Restaurant Chain Masala's $34 Million Assets Seized In New Zealand After Allegations Of Fraud
    The restaurant chain owners, Joti Jain, Rupinder Chahil, Rajwinder Grewal and Supinder Singh have allegedly evaded paying tax by systematically stripping cash from the restaurants 

    Indian Restaurant Chain Masala's $34 Million Assets Seized In New Zealand After Allegations Of Fraud