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Mark Kirk returns to Senate after recovering from stroke

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(MCT) — WASHINGTON — Sen. Mark Kirk’s halting, 18-minute climb up the Capitol steps on Thursday came nearly a year after a major stroke left him so incapacitated that he was in critical condition for 10 to 15 days and had difficulty keeping his balance while sitting up.

Those details about Kirk’s illness were among many revealed by the senator’s medical team, which met with reporters after his much-heralded return to the Senate.

“It’s a great day for the senator, because he has done so well,” said his brain surgeon, Dr. Richard Fessler of Northwestern Memorial Hospital. “It’s a great day for the United States, because he is a phenomenal senator from Illinois. And I think it’s a great day for medicine to be able to showcase how well we can do for our patients, with the miracles we can perform.”

Fessler was among hundreds of people on hand — including dozens of lawmakers, Republicans and Democrats — to welcome back Kirk, R-Ill.

Kirk’s ischemic stroke, caused by a blood clot in his right carotid artery, left the lawmaker’s cognitive functions intact, Fessler said. The senator had 10 to 11 months of intensive therapy — likened to boot camp — after he was stricken.

Fessler said Kirk has normal use of his right hand and arm but not his left arm. His left leg is strong near his hip and weaker at his foot, so he wears a leg brace. Kirk’s speech, while hesitant, is “vastly improved ... and will continue to improve,” the surgeon said.

Other medical professionals, while raving about Kirk’s progress, said his rehabilitation would be a lifelong process with additional progress, sometimes spotty, ahead.

Kirk was greeted by several Illinoisans, including Sen. Dick Durbin, the senior senator from Illinois, and Terry Gainer, the Senate sergeant-at-arms. Also in attendance were former Rep. Bob Dold, R-Ill., who had Kirk’s old House seat for two years and left office Thursday, and incoming Rep. Tammy Duckworth, D-Ill., a double amputee from the Iraq war who called it a “fantastic day” for people with disabilities and for the nation.

They joined hundreds of other well-wishers who endured temperatures in the 30s while applauding Kirk.

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