Trump Says MRI at Walter Reed Came Back ‘Perfect,’ Dismisses Health Rumors

President Donald Trump has revealed that he underwent an MRI during his most recent medical checkup at Walter Reed National Military Medical Center earlier this month and that the results came back “perfect,” pushing back on recent speculation about his health from major media outlets.

Speaking to reporters aboard Air Force One en route to Tokyo, Trump confirmed the scan took place during what he described as his “semi-annual physical.”

The 47th president joked about the thoroughness of the test and dismissed questions about why it was ordered.

“I did, I got an MRI — it was perfect,” Trump said. “We had an MRI, and the machine, you know, the whole thing, and it was perfect.”

When pressed on why he underwent the imaging procedure, Trump replied, “You could ask the doctors.”

The MRI was conducted at Walter Reed on Oct. 10 as part of a broader medical evaluation that Trump characterized as routine. The White House described it as a continuation of a series of checkups that began earlier in the year, including a full physical in April.

Trump told reporters that his medical team had given him “some of the best reports for the age” and insisted that the results were entirely normal.

“If I didn’t think it was going to be good, I wouldn’t run,” Trump said, referring to his 2026 re-election campaign.

The brief comments came amid renewed speculation in mainstream media outlets about the 79-year-old president’s health, much of it driven by online rumors and out-of-context photographs circulated by partisan commentators.

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