BOSTON (AP) – Sen. Edward Kennedy, who has brain cancer, was taken by ambulance to a hospital near his Cape Cod vacation home after suffering a seizure. He returned home a few hours later.
A statement issued by the 76-year-old senator’s office attributed the “minor seizure” Friday to a change in medications. Sen. John Kerry said his fellow Massachusetts Democrat was well and told him he would watch the evening’s presidential debate between John McCain and Barack Obama.
Kennedy had another seizure in May and underwent surgery in June for a malignant brain tumor. After undergoing six weeks of chemotherapy and radiation treatment, he has been steadily increasing his public activity. Still, he remains prone to seizures – electrical disturbances in the brain – in part because of the location of his tumor, the left parietal lobe. Among other functions, it controls speech.
A 911 call from the Kennedy compound in Hyannis Port came just after 5 p.m., said Barnstable police Sgt. Ben Baxter. Kennedy was taken to Cape Cod Hospital and was “alert and responsive” during the trip, Baxter said.
Kennedy’s office confirmed he returned home about 8 p.m.
Kennedy had told reporters visiting Hyannis Port on Tuesday that he was actively following the presidential race. “I’m going to be following it particularly next Friday,” the senator said with a laugh.
In his opening statement, McCain noted his colleague’s hospitalization, saying, “Our thoughts and prayers go out to the lion of the Senate.” The Republican nominee worked with Kennedy recently on immigration legislation, although Kennedy has endorsed Obama for president.
Kennedy received Chilean President Michelle Bachelet at his home Tuesday in his first public appearance since he gave a surprise speech in late August at the Democratic National Convention.
Bachelet presented the senator with her country’s highest civilian award – the Order to the Merit of Chile – in recognition of his opposition to the country’s 1973 government overthrow and his work to cut off military aid to dictator Augusto Pinochet.
At the meeting, the senator stumbled momentarily as he tried to walk on the thick grass, but he quickly regained his balance. While he didn’t take questions from reporters, he departed from his prepared text to point out landmarks to Bachelet and tell a story about a friend in the crowd.
In early September, Kennedy announced he would not return to the Senate until January, but he has since held videoconferences with his staff and members of the Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions, which he leads.
Kennedy surprised his colleagues in July when he made a surprise return to Capitol Hill to vote on a Medicare bill.
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