Some details about the POTUS physical:
"All of the president's organ systems and joints were found to be normal, and most of his cardiac measures fell in the normal range. Even his eyes were described as exemplary. His uncorrected vision is 20/30, which means he can drive without glasses, said Dr Jackson. But he has a history of hypercholesterolemia and has been noted to have what Dr Jackson called "nonclinical" coronary atherosclerosis in the past and in the current exam.
At 75 inches (6.25 feet) and 239 pounds, the president has a body mass index of 30.7, which is considered obese. Even so, he is not prediabetic. He had a fasting glucose of 89 and a hemoglobin A1C of 5% — a normal measure.
Trump is taking a 10-mg daily dose of rosuvastatin (Crestor, AstraZeneca), 81 mg daily of aspirin for heart attack prevention, finasteride (Propecia, Merck) to treat male-pattern baldness, and antibiotics for rosacea.
His blood pressure was 122/74 and his resting heart rate was 68. His total cholesterol was 223; his triglycerides were 129; HDL was 67; and, LDL was 143. The ratio of total cholesterol to HDL was 3.3.
His triglycerides and LDL have increased significantly since the president's last reported measures in 2016, when his LDL was 94 and triglycerides were 61. His HDL at the time was 63. Dr Jackson said he hoped a diet and exercise program would help reduce the LDL figure.
Palpation of the carotid arteries was normal, and an electrocardiogram revealed a normal sinus rhythm of 71 and a normal axis. A transthoracic echocardiogram showed normal left ventricular systolic function, with a 60%-to-65% ejection fraction, a normal left ventricular size and wall thickness, a normal right ventricle, and all normal valves. The president underwent an exercise stress echocardiogram that "demonstrated above-average exercise capacity based on age and sex," said Dr Jackson.
In 2013, President Trump had a coronary artery calcium score of 98. It has risen to 133, but conversations with cardiologists at Walter Reed, the Cleveland Clinic, and elsewhere indicated that the increase was not a concern because it has not gone up that much over time, Dr Jackson said."
Source:
https://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/891410