Sum 41 frontman Deryck Whibley was released from the hospital Saturday after he was treated for pneumonia and faced the “possibility of heart failure,” his wife announced.
“I’m very completely happy to be giving this update. Deryck was discharged after responding so well to his treatments,” Ariana Whibley shared on Instagram. “He’s now under the care of his mother who’s a registered nurse and myself.”
The post featured a bouquet of flowers on a shelf alongside photos of the couple and their children.
Whibley was rushed to the hospital Thursday night as he was fighting pneumonia — weeks after he wrapped up the long-lasting pop-rock band’s tour.
Ariana Whibley shared a series of photos from the terrifying ordeal which showed the rocker being loaded into the ambulance and her holding her husband’s hand as he wore a pulse oximeter.
Medical staff were fearful in regards to the 43-year-old’s vital organs as there was plenty of strain on Whibley’s heart, which kept the “Fat Lip” singer hospitalized for a number of days to undergo treatment.
“The pressure and strain on his heart and lungs has improved and he’s in a position to breathe without as much pain.” Ariana Whibley continued. “I can’t let you know how truly grateful we’re for the community around us.”
“We knew we had support however the outpouring of affection for our family has been absolutely overwhelming and we will’t begin to say how much it has meant to us and helped us stay positive through this,” she added.
The couple was presupposed to be in Chicago celebrating their 8-year wedding anniversary before the “In Too Deep” hitmaker was hospitalized.
The 2 are parents to their two young children, 3-year-old son Lydon Idby and six-month-old daughter Quentin Arlo.
Last week’s hospitalization is the newest of a series of health scares for Whibley which his wife referenced in Friday’s Instagram post saying, “This is clearly not our first time in a situation like this but it surely brings back plenty of really difficult memories seeing him back in a hospital bed connected to wires and IVs.”
In 2014, Whibley was diagnosed with each liver and kidney failure after he collapsed on his kitchen floor and spent every week in a coma as doctors detoxed his body from alcohol.
Whibley founded the Canadian rock band with Steve Jocz, Richard Roy and Jon Marshall in 1996 when the group went by Kaspir.
The band, which most recently consisted of Whibley, Dave Baksh, Jason McCaslin, Tom Thacker and Frank Zummo, announced in May they were disbanding after 27 years.
Earlier this month, the group accomplished their “Let the Bad Times Roll” tour and has 4 more performances scheduled before officially calling it quits.