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President Trump visits recovering first lady at hospital, says she’s ‘doing really well’

President Trump arrives at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center in Bethesda, Md., on Tuesday to visit First Lady Melania Trump.
(Carolyn Kaster / Associated Press)
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President Trump visited his wife, Melania, in the hospital Tuesday as she continued to recover from a kidney procedure.

Trump said earlier Tuesday that the first lady was “doing really well” and that he expected her back at the White House before the end of the week. He arrived by helicopter at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center outside Washington on Tuesday afternoon and stayed for about 90 minutes before returning to the White House. He also visited Monday after doctors performed the “embolization” procedure.

“Melania is doing really well. She’s watching us right now,” Trump said as he spoke near the Capitol at an annual tribute to law enforcement officers killed in the line of duty.

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“And I want to thank the incredible doctors,” Trump added. “They did a fantastic job.”

At the Capitol later, where he joined Republican senators at their weekly lunch, Trump reiterated that his wife is “really doing well.”

Trump joked at lunch that support for the first lady was so high that he had her promise she wouldn’t run against him, said a person familiar with the discussion but not authorized to discuss a private conversation. Trump also joked that his 48-year-old wife should be the one visiting him in the hospital and not the other way around, a senator said. The president turns 72 next month.

Trump tweeted Tuesday that his wife “will be leaving hospital in 2 or 3 days.” Her spokeswoman had said in a statement Monday that the first lady was likely to remain hospitalized for “the duration of the week.”

The White House said the procedure was successful but withheld details of the first lady’s condition, citing her privacy.

Two urologists who have no personal knowledge of Trump’s condition said the most likely explanation for the embolization procedure is a type of noncancerous kidney tumor called an angiomyolipoma.

They’re not common but tend to occur in middle-aged women and can cause problematic bleeding if they become large enough, said Dr. Keith Kowalczyk of MedStar Georgetown University Hospital.

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The “treatment of choice” is to cut off the blood supply to shrink the growth, said Dr. Lambros Stamatakis of MedStar Washington Hospital Center. Doctors do that with an embolization — snaking a catheter into the blood vessels of the kidney to find the right one and block it.

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