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- THE U.S. CAMPAIGN, Page 26The Health Question
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- By Anastasia Toufexis -- With reporting by Dan Goodgame/
- Washington
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- Nothing generates more rumors -- founded or unfounded -- than
- the state of a President's health. After Woodrow Wilson
- suffered a stroke in 1919, there were wild claims that he had
- contracted syphilis and was demented. Richard Nixon was said to
- have been close to mental collapse during the months before his
- resignation. Mocking questions were raised about Jimmy Carter's
- psychological state after he reported being attacked on his
- Georgia farm by what the press dubbed a "killer rabbit." George
- Bush's May 1991 heart flutter and his collapse at a state dinner
- in Tokyo last January have fed rumors of serious health problems
- -- as has his somber, testy, weary mood in recent weeks.
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- There is no verifiable evidence behind these rumors.
- Bush's personal physician, Burton Lee, who checks on him every
- day, insists that the President is in "excellent" condition.
- Bush eats heartily, yet keeps his weight around 195 lbs., which
- is just about right for a man of 6 ft. 2 in. At 68, he has
- minor osteoarthritis, a common condition in men his age. He
- exercises vigorously several times a week without showing any
- sign of physical distress. He works and travels long hours
- without complaint. His vomiting and collapse at the Tokyo dinner
- were credibly attributed not to any chronic problem but to acute
- food poisoning or a bout with an intestinal bug.
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- Still, some Bush watchers have speculated that the
- President's medication may be affecting his mood and behavior.
- Bush takes a 0.15-mg pill each morning to replace the thyroid
- hormone that his body stopped producing after doctors shut down
- his thyroid gland as treatment for Graves' disease last year.
- The overactive gland caused the erratic heartbeat that was
- corrected during a four-month course of therapy with the drugs
- digoxin and procainamide. Since then, Lee says, Bush has
- experienced no arrhythmia.
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- Thyroid-replacement drugs can cause emotional as well as
- physical changes in patients if the dosage is not properly
- calibrated. But Lee rules such side effects out in Bush's case,
- saying the President's medication is monitored very carefulIf
- Bush seems tired or discouraged, says Lee, it is an emotional
- reaction to his deepening unpopularity and to the bipartisan
- political hammering he is taking. Still, he notes, the President
- "takes this battering better than anybody that I know could take
- it. He has tremendous equanimity." Those are reassuring words,
- but because it's impossible to prove a negative, they will not
- erase all the doubts of those who wonder whether the President's
- political slump mirrors a worrisome physical condition.
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