
Donald Trump’s recently disclosed MRI doctor’s note is raising more questions than it answers, with medical experts suggesting that the screening detailed in the former president’s report simply doesn’t exist in routine clinical practice. This has sparked fresh worries about what his team might be attempting to hide. Within 24 hours of Trump’s doctor releasing a brief summary of a supposed “preventative abdominal MRI”, specialists throughout the radiology field have been raising concerns. Medical analyst Dr Sanjay Gupta, who consulted with what he termed “the most credentialed radiologists in the country,” claimed that the procedure described in Trump’s documentation was practically unknown. This followed revelations about Trump’s ‘grotesque’ McDonald’s order – which involves disgustingly combining two menu items. For the biggest stories in Wales first, sign up to our daily newsletter here During an appearance on the Midas Health programme, Dr Gupta claimed he reached out to leading radiology specialists across the nation to confirm whether a “torso MRI” was ever employed as a standard screening method for elderly patients. He claimed the response was clear-cut. “No-one is aware of getting an MRI of the torso… It doesn’t exist. There is no clinical guideline that says, as you age, get an MRI of the heart and abdomen,” he claimed. The doctor’s note describing Trump’s imaging, which selectively documented only cardiovascular and abdominal results, immediately caused concern amongst experts. Dr. Gupta highlighted that MRIs were not typically used as primary screening tool for general wellness, making Trump’s alleged test highly unusual. Several other experts were equally baffled by the omissions in the note. Dr. Gupta proposed two “unusual” scenarios that might shed light on what transpired. The first scenario suggested Trump underwent a full-body MRI, a procedure popular among affluent patients despite offering little actionable medical insight, but his doctor only disclosed part of the results. The second possibility was that the President received a bespoke “torso MRI”, a procedure for which there seems to be no medical justification or guidelines. Dr. Gupta stated that, regardless of which, if any, procedure was performed, the reporting was inexplicably incomplete. He claimed: “MRIs are not used as primary screening tools. But the fact that they just chose to focus on the heart and the abdominal findings honestly makes no sense. And this has been vetted across the spectrum with external experts as well. “So again, they’re creating more problems for themselves, if you ask me, and creating more questions to be answered than they’re actually solving. Now talk about his behaviour. And one of the things that you and I have been very mindful of is to not speculate, but to simply report the observational, objective things that we’re seeing.” Trump teased the release of the note before revealing it, an approach that the doctor argued had created a larger public relations disaster for his campaign. Whilst Dr. Gupta emphasised he would not diagnose or speculate about Trump’s health without evidence, he observed that the campaign’s secretive approach continued to draw attention to Trump’s behaviour and public appearances. He said: “Clearly, it looks like he’s not getting enough sleep or he’s just more fatigued. I think The New York Times did extensive reporting that he and his team have panned, but it seems like their reporting on his fatigue and his functionality is bearing out in his public appearances. So that’s what we know. “That’s been documented through significant reporting. To your point, erratic behaviour, which is either a hallmark of who he is as a person, because we’ve seen elements of that over the last 10 to 15 years since he’s been in politics, or one could say it’s getting worse, more frequent, which I think is the case.”
Original source: gb