Austin American-Statesman

Hillary Clinton’s blood clot in her head, doctors say

Confident doctors treating blood clot between brain, skull.

- By Matthew Lee

Secretary of State Hillary Clinton developed a blood clot in her head but did not suffer a stroke or neurologic­al damage and her doctors are confident she will make a full recovery.

WASHInGTOn — Secretary of State Hillary Clinton developed a blood clot in her head but did not suffer a stroke or neurologic­al damage, her doctors said Monday. They say they are confident she will make a full recovery.

In a statement that revealed the location of the clot, Clinton’s doctors said it is in the vein in the space between the brain and the skull behind the right ear. She is being treated with blood thinners to help dissolve the clot, the doctors said, and she will be released once the medication dose has been establishe­d.

Clinton, 65, is making excellent progress and is in good spirits, Dr. Lisa Bardack of the Mount Kisco Medical Group and Dr. Gigi El-Bayoumi of George Washington University said in a statement.

Clinton, who was spending a second day at a New York hospital, developed the clot after suffering a concussion earlier in December. She had fainted, fallen and struck her head at home while battling a stomach virus, said her spokesman, Phillipe Reines. She has not been seen publicly since Dec. 7.

Reines said her doctors discovered the clot Sunday while performing a follow-up exam on the concussion. She was admitted to New YorkPresby­terian Hospital.

Clinton’s complicati­on “certainly isn’t the most common thing to happen after a concussion” and is one of the few types of blood clots in the skull or head that are treated with blood thinners, said Dr. Larry Goldstein, a neurologis­t who is director of Duke University’s stroke center.

The area where Clinton’s clot developed is “a drainage channel, the equivalent of a big vein inside the skull — it’s how the blood gets back to the heart,” Goldstein said.

Blood thinners usually are enough to treat the clot, and it should have no long-term consequenc­es if her doctors are saying she has suffered no neurologic­al damage from it, Goldstein said.

Clinton had planned to step down as secretary of state at the beginning of President Barack Obama’s second term. Whether she will return to work before she resigns remained a question.

Democrats are privately if not publicly speculatin­g: How might her illness affect a decision about running for president in 2016?

After decades in politics, Clinton says she plans to spend the next year resting. She has long insisted she had no intention of mounting a second campaign for the White House four years from now. But the door is not entirely closed, and she would almost certainly emerge as the Democrat to beat if she decided to give in to calls by Demo- cratic fans and run again.

Her age — and thereby health — would likely be a factor under considerat­ion, given that Clinton would be 69 when sworn in, if she were elected in 2016. That might become even more of an issue in the early jockeying for 2016 if what started as a bad stomach bug becomes a prolonged, public bout with more serious infirmity.

Not that Democrats are willing to talk openly about the political implicatio­ns of a long illness, choosing to keep any discussion­s about her condition behind closed doors.

 ??  ?? Hillary Clinton suffered concussion in early Dec.
Hillary Clinton suffered concussion in early Dec.

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