The letter Hillary Clinton's campaign published Wednesday from Dr. Lisa Bardack revealing that the candidate had surgery this year is the last of the medical records it will share.

An aide to Clinton said the Democratic candidate was referring to the letter when she said 'more information' would be coming out soon in a radio interview that aired Thursday.

The interview was taped before Clinton's campaign revealed that she had surgery quietly in January to alleviate pain she was having in her left ear.

'More information, I think, will be very shortly because we really want to respond to legitimate questions that people might have,' she said on Tom Joyner's radio show.

Doctors put in a myringotomy tube and ran a CT scan in March that showed no abnormalities of the brain but confirmed she has mild chronic sinusitis.

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Hillary Clinton says the letter her campaign published Wednesday from Dr. Lisa Bardack revealing that she had surgery this year isn't the last of the medical records she plans to put out

The Democratic presidential candidate did not disclose the surgery during the primary. It came out as part of a letter from her doctor detailing her bacterial pneumonia diagnosis and treatment.

For three days Clinton stayed inside her home this week as she recovered after the illness caused her to become faint at a 9/11 anniversary event. Today is her first day back on the campaign trail.

'I’m very touched by the concern that’s been set forth about my health. I’m really glad that I did finally follow my doctor’s orders and take some days to rest instead of just trying to keep powering through, which I think is a common experience for people,' she told Joyner Thursday morning.

Clinton did not specify what additional records she planned to release, but her campaign said after the fact that she meant the letter.

'We’re going to put out more information, and that will be then twice as much as he’s put out, and we’ll see what, if anything, he’s willing to disclose,' Clinton said, talking about her opponent, Donald Trump.

The letter from Dr. Bardack on Wednesday covered only the doctors visits Clinton has had since last summer. And while it contained vital statistics like her cholesterol level, other information, like her height and weight, was missing.

The 68-year-old continues to take a blood-thinning agent to prevent her from developing another clot - she's had two over the years - and medications for an overactive thyroid and her allergies.

Despite her recent illness, which Clinton kept from the press, her staff and her daughter for days, Bardack says the White House contender 'continues to remain healthy and fit to serve as President of the United States.'

Trump made some of his records public today on the Dr. Oz show, including receny colonoscopy and heart scans.

The GOP nominee for president is overweight and doesn't exercise aside from 'moving his hands' when he speaks, but Oz said he is 'healthy enough to be president.'

Donald Trump shared a summary of his health records with Dr. Oz on his show, which taped on Wednesday and will air today

Clinton argued on Joyner's show that she's 'worked very, very hard' to be transparent.

And not just in comparison to her Trump, 'but really, in a comparison to anybody who’s run.'

'The medical information I’ve put out, and we’re going to put out more, meets and exceeds the standard that other presidential candidates, including President Obama and Mitt Romney and others, have met,' she stated.

Her tax returns for the last 40 years are also public, Clinton said.

'So I think that the real questions need to be directed toward Donald Trump and his failure to even meet the most minimalistic standards that we expect of someone being the nominee of one of our two major parties.'

Clinton made the comments about transparency in response to a question from CNN's Don Lemon, who had also called into the show, about Colin Powell's hacked emails.

In one, the former secretary of state disparaged Clinton and said, 'Everything HRC touches, she kind of screws up with hubris.'

Lemon asked her how she would answer him and critics who believe that she's constantly fumbling the ball 'whether it’s your emails, or disclosing your health issues, or even pointing out Trump’s flypaper-like ability to attract the racially insensitive or deplorables.'

Clinton declined to comment on Powell's emails and instead shifted the conversation to Russia's intensified hacks on U.S. political figures and her opponent's 'alarming closeness with the Kremlin,' which she said is 'deeply concerning.'

Clinton declined to comment on Powell's emails, including one that said she screws things up with her hubris

'I have a great deal of respect for Colin Powell, and I have a lot of sympathy for anyone whose emails become public. I’m not going to start discussing someone else’s private emails, 'she said. 'I’ve already spent a lot of time talking about my own, as you know.'

She said what's 'really important about the emails is the chilling fact...that the Russians are continuing to attempt to interfere in our election.'

Dinging her White House rival, she said, 'There’s a lot that Trump should answer for because these attempts by Russia to interfere in the election are ones that go right hand-in-hand with his closeness to the Kremlin, his flattery of Putin.

'So I’m going to keep raising the alarm about Russian influence, and that, of course, raises questions about who Trump actually does business with.'

Clinton rebuffed a second attempt from Lemon to get her to respond to Powell's comment about her 'hubris' and began talking about how transparent she's been.

In the interview Clinton also tried salvage her attack on Trump from last Friday, when she said 'half' of of his supporters are a 'basket of deplorables' - and had to apologize.

'Donald Trump has run a deplorable campaign. He has accepted support and been cheered on by the likes of David Duke, the former Grand Wizard of the Ku Klux Klan, and other white supremacists,' she said.

Clinton jumped on Trump's running mate, Mike Pence, over the fact that he 'wouldn’t even call former KKK leader deplorable.'

'It's amazing,' she said.

Pence refused on CNN to label Duke that way, saying he's 'not in the name-calling business.'