Philip Ades, director of cardiac rehabilitation at the University of Vermont Medical Center, wrote that Sanders is “more than fit enough to pursue vigorous activities and an occupation that requires stamina and an ability to handle a great deal of stress.”

Martin LeWinter, Sanders’ personal cardiologist and an attending cardiologist at UVM, wrote that the senator “has made an uneventful recovery” from his heart attack and concluded: “I am confident he has the mental and physical stamina to fully undertake the rigors of the Presidency.”

Monahan’s letter also revealed the results of Sanders’ most recent physical examination, on Dec. 19, which showed the senator as having a blood pressure level of 102/56 and a pulse rate of 62 beats per minute. His height measured 6 feet, and he weighed in at 174 pounds.

Sanders has been treated for medical conditions such as gout and high cholesterol, Monahan wrote. He has no history of tobacco use, he exercises regularly, and he seldom drinks alcohol. His daily medications include atorvastatin, aspirin, clopidogrel, levothyroxine and lisinopril.

Sanders “underwent a successful graded exercise treadmill examination” earlier this month following his heart attack, Monahan wrote, and his “overall test performance was rated above average compared to a reference population of the same age.”

Ades echoed that Sanders “was able to exercise to a level that is approximately 50% higher than other men his age with a similar diagnosis,” adding that the senator’s “level of fitness would be suggestive of favorable outcomes, from a cardiovascular perspective, going forward.”

Sanders, the eldest presidential candidate among the 2020 field, previously released a letter from the attending Senate physician during his 2016 White House run summarizing his medical evaluation and describing him as “in overall very good health.”

But Sanders is the last of the current Democratic primary’s three septuagenarian frontrunners who have moved to assuage voters’ concerns regarding their advanced age by making pages of health records public.

Sen. Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts released a report from her physician early this month stating that she is a “a very healthy 70 year old woman” with “no medical conditions or health problems that would keep her from fulfilling the duties of the President of the United States.”

Two weeks later, former Vice President Joe Biden’s campaign released medical documents that included a statement from his physician, who assessed that Biden is “a healthy, vigorous, 77-year-old male, who is fit to successfully execute the duties of the Presidency, to include those as Chief Executive, Head of State, and Commander in Chief.”