TOI correspondent from Washington: The White House late Friday released a three-page medical memo declaring that US President Donald Trump, who turns 80 on June 14 and is the oldest person ever sworn into the Oval Office, possesses “excellent” cognitive and physical performance and is fully fit to continue as commander-in-chief.The timing of the release, shortly before 11 p.m. on a Friday, ensured that America’s political class was already halfway through drinks, dinner, or doom-scrolling before the nation learned that its president apparently enjoys the biological vitality of a much younger man.The headline-grabber was the assessment that Trump’s cardiovascular system resembles that of someone 14 years younger than his chronological age, a claim instantly embraced by supporters and met with raised eyebrows by critics who have spent months circulating close-up photographs of swollen ankles, bruised hands, and an occasionally unsteady gait.According to Navy Capt. Sean Barbabella, Trump’s physician, the president underwent extensive testing at Walter Reed Medical Center, including cardiac, pulmonary, neurological and cognitive examinations, lab work and consultations with 22 specialists from multiple academic institutions. The verdict was emphatic: normal cardiac function, normal mental status, no signs of depression or anxiety, and overall physical health robust enough to withstand the demands of the presidency.Yet buried among the glowing reviews was language more familiar to ordinary mortals. The report noted “slight lower leg swelling,” albeit improved from last year. It confirmed continuing bruising on the back of Trump’s hands, attributing it to frequent handshaking combined with aspirin use. The president also takes cholesterol-lowering rosuvastatin and ezetimibe and has been advised to increase physical activity, lose weight, and improve his diet.The recommendations prompted immediate questions: If the patient is already a marvel of presidential physiology, why is he being instructed to exercise more and eat better? Trump currently weighs 238 pounds, up 14 pounds from his 2025 exam. For perspective, that puts him closer to American football linebacker girth, dimensions that have occasioned much mirth.The report’s description of Trump’s “regular physical activity” also drew chuckles from skeptics familiar with the president’s argument that the human body possesses a finite battery of energy that should not be unnecessarily depleted. Still, he does enjoy one health advantage that physicians routinely praise: he is a non-smoker and a teetotaler.For Trump’s most devoted supporters, however, the report merely confirms what they already believe: he is less a 79-year-old politician than a force of nature, a political Superman powered by cheeseburgers, Diet Coke and indignation. Critics though point to his ankle swelling, periodic hand discoloration, a heavily publicized diagnosis of chronic venous insufficiency, episodes in which Trump appears drowsy at public events, and recent photographs showing makeup covering bruises. Some commentators have gone further, speculating about sleep disorders, cognitive decline or other undisclosed conditions.Those allegations remain largely speculative, with the medical report finding no neurological abnormalities and specifically stating that Trump demonstrated normal mental status and excellent cognitive performance.The cognitive testing itself has become a recurring Trump obsession. For years, he has proudly recounted passing screening exams such as the Montreal Cognitive Assessment, often describing them as if he had conquered a doctoral exam rather than a test designed to detect cognitive impairment.Trump’s risible retelling typically features his celebrated ability to remember a sequence of words and identify common animals. In MAGA folklore, the president’s successful identification of a duck may soon rank alongside the moon landing and the defeat of the Soviet Union. Medical experts note that the test is a screening tool, not an IQ examination; passing it is reassuring, but hardly proof of superhuman intellect.Still, the latest report leaves Americans with two competing portraits. One depicts a remarkably energetic president whose heart allegedly belongs to a man in his mid-60s. The other sees a near 80-year-old who is over weight, has circulatory issues, and whose every bruise becomes a national guessing game. Either way, Trump’s annual physical remains the only medical examination in America whose results are debated with the intensity of a Supreme Court ruling.
