Hillary Clinton discharge from Hospital After Treatment of Clot
Hillary Rodham Clinton, whose itinerant tour as foreign minister was abruptly halted last month by a number of health problems, was discharged from a hospital in New York on Wednesday night after a few days of treatment for a blood clot in a vein in her head.
The news of her release was the first welcome sign at an alarming month that Mrs. Clinton grounded - prevented her from answering questions in Congress about the treatment of the State Department of the deadly attack on a U.S. mission in Libya or present when President Obama announced Senator John Kerry as his choice for her successor when she resigned as foreign minister.
"Her medical team advised her that she has made good progress on all fronts to make, and they are confident that they will make a full recovery," Philippe Reine, a senior adviser to Mrs. Clinton, said in a statement.
Mrs. Clinton, 65, was hospitalized New York-Presbyterian/Columbia on Sunday after a scan discovered a blood clot. The scan was part of its follow-up treatment for a concussion, they are more than two weeks earlier, when she fainted and fell and hit his head. According to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, brought fainting caused by dehydration, to a stomach virus. The concussion was diagnosed on 13 December, although the decline had occurred earlier this week.
The clot was potentially serious blockage of an artery that supplies blood to be transported from the brains. Untreated, these blockages can lead to stroke or stroke. The primary treatment is blood thinners for blood clots to keep growing, and several blood clots, and plenty of fluids to prevent dehydration, which is a major risk factor for blood clots.
Photographed leaving the hospital, thought Mrs. Clinton and her husband, former President Bill Clinton, and their daughter, Chelsea, happy. In a Twitter message Wednesday, said Chelsea Clinton: "Grateful my mother from the hospital and is on his way home even more grateful for her medical team confident they will make a full recovery.".
Dr. David J. Langer, a brain surgeon and associate professor at Hofstra North Shore-LIJ School of Medicine, says that Mrs. Clinton would closely in the coming days, weeks and months to ensure that the doses of anticoagulants is correct, and to solidify the waxes. Dr. Langer is not involved in her care.
Mrs. Clinton illness cut short what would have been a victory lap for her at the State Department. With only a few weeks before the end of the first term of President Obama - the specified time frame them for his own departure - they will be able to do anything more than to say goodbye to his troops to do.
Dr. Langer said artery blocked by a clot or not to reopen. Sometimes, he said, the blood clot still and the body is covered with tissue that closes or narrows the blood vessel. As long as the conductor on the other side of the head is open, there is no problem for the patient.
One thing is clear, and it may never be known with certainty, what is the reason for Mrs. Clinton clot. Around the second week of December, supposedly they have ordered a stomach virus that causes vomiting and dehydration, fainted and hit his head. A concussion was diagnosed a few days after the fall, 13 December, and the public was told Sunday that she had a blood clot, although the location was not revealed until the next day.
She had a number of risk factors for thrombosis, such as dehydration and its history of a blood clot. In addition, women are more sensitive than men as blood clots, especially when dehydrated. The trap can also be a factor, but it is not clear whether the head injury severe enough to have caused a blood clot. The type of stroke she had much more likely to be associated with a skull fracture than with a concussion, some experts say.
In theory, Dr. Manley said exhaustion may temporarily weaken the immune system, while a person resistance to infection, such as a stomach virus apparently started Clinton problems. But in his opinion, was the main factor contributing to the blood clot probably head injury from her fall.
Hillary Rodham Clinton, whose itinerant tour as foreign minister was abruptly halted last month by a number of health problems, was discharged from a hospital in New York on Wednesday night after a few days of treatment for a blood clot in a vein in her head.
The news of her release was the first welcome sign at an alarming month that Mrs. Clinton grounded - prevented her from answering questions in Congress about the treatment of the State Department of the deadly attack on a U.S. mission in Libya or present when President Obama announced Senator John Kerry as his choice for her successor when she resigned as foreign minister.
"Her medical team advised her that she has made good progress on all fronts to make, and they are confident that they will make a full recovery," Philippe Reine, a senior adviser to Mrs. Clinton, said in a statement.
Mrs. Clinton, 65, was hospitalized New York-Presbyterian/Columbia on Sunday after a scan discovered a blood clot. The scan was part of its follow-up treatment for a concussion, they are more than two weeks earlier, when she fainted and fell and hit his head. According to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, brought fainting caused by dehydration, to a stomach virus. The concussion was diagnosed on 13 December, although the decline had occurred earlier this week.
The clot was potentially serious blockage of an artery that supplies blood to be transported from the brains. Untreated, these blockages can lead to stroke or stroke. The primary treatment is blood thinners for blood clots to keep growing, and several blood clots, and plenty of fluids to prevent dehydration, which is a major risk factor for blood clots.
Photographed leaving the hospital, thought Mrs. Clinton and her husband, former President Bill Clinton, and their daughter, Chelsea, happy. In a Twitter message Wednesday, said Chelsea Clinton: "Grateful my mother from the hospital and is on his way home even more grateful for her medical team confident they will make a full recovery.".
Dr. David J. Langer, a brain surgeon and associate professor at Hofstra North Shore-LIJ School of Medicine, says that Mrs. Clinton would closely in the coming days, weeks and months to ensure that the doses of anticoagulants is correct, and to solidify the waxes. Dr. Langer is not involved in her care.
Mrs. Clinton illness cut short what would have been a victory lap for her at the State Department. With only a few weeks before the end of the first term of President Obama - the specified time frame them for his own departure - they will be able to do anything more than to say goodbye to his troops to do.
Dr. Langer said artery blocked by a clot or not to reopen. Sometimes, he said, the blood clot still and the body is covered with tissue that closes or narrows the blood vessel. As long as the conductor on the other side of the head is open, there is no problem for the patient.
One thing is clear, and it may never be known with certainty, what is the reason for Mrs. Clinton clot. Around the second week of December, supposedly they have ordered a stomach virus that causes vomiting and dehydration, fainted and hit his head. A concussion was diagnosed a few days after the fall, 13 December, and the public was told Sunday that she had a blood clot, although the location was not revealed until the next day.
She had a number of risk factors for thrombosis, such as dehydration and its history of a blood clot. In addition, women are more sensitive than men as blood clots, especially when dehydrated. The trap can also be a factor, but it is not clear whether the head injury severe enough to have caused a blood clot. The type of stroke she had much more likely to be associated with a skull fracture than with a concussion, some experts say.
In theory, Dr. Manley said exhaustion may temporarily weaken the immune system, while a person resistance to infection, such as a stomach virus apparently started Clinton problems. But in his opinion, was the main factor contributing to the blood clot probably head injury from her fall.
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