Bill Clinton to have further surgery

US: Bill Clinton is to have another operation to remove scar tissue and fluid from his left chest, following on from his quadruple…

US: Bill Clinton is to have another operation to remove scar tissue and fluid from his left chest, following on from his quadruple bypass surgery in September, his office said yesterday.

The statement said that the procedure was a "recognised, occasional consequence of open heart surgery", and carried a low risk. It would keep Mr Clinton (58) confined to bed for three to 10 days.

"The scar tissue developed as a result of fluid and inflammation causing compression and collapse of the lower lobe of the left lung," his office said. "The surgery will be done either through a small incision or with a video-assisted thoracoscope inserted between ribs." Doctors discovered the condition during a recent routine X-ray.

The operation will take place tomorrow at the New York-Presbyterian hospital, where Mr Clinton had open heart surgery after some of his arteries had been found to be more than 90 per cent blocked.

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The former president said he planned to stick to a scheduled round of golf in Florida today with George Bush senior for tsunami relief. "I feel fine," Mr Clinton told reporters after a visit to the Oval Office with the former president. "And we're going to go play golf tomorrow." Though he would return to work as soon as possible, he added: "I'm going to slow down for the next couple of weeks. But I'm in good shape."

He has lost a lot of weight since chest pains led him to be checked by doctors last year. They found lesions that needed surgery. His appetite for junk food and Southern soul food were deemed partly to blame, and he has been on a strict diet for six months.

Other than that, Mr Clinton has had the normal health problems that often accompany ageing, such as periods of slightly elevated cholesterol and hearing loss. In 1997 he was fitted with hearing aids.

In early 2001, shortly after his presidency ended, he had a cancerous growth removed from his back; it turned out to be basal cell carcinoma, the most treatable form of skin cancer.