In this handout image provided by U.S. Rep. Gabrielle Giffords'...

In this handout image provided by U.S. Rep. Gabrielle Giffords' office on Jan. 11, 2011, Mark Kelly, husband of U.S. Rep. Gabrielle Giffords, holds his wife's hand in the congresswoman's hospital room at University Medical Center in Tucson, Ariz. (Jan. 9, 2011) Credit: Getty Images

One of Rep. Gabrielle Giffords’ doctors declared Tuesday she has “a 101 percent chance of surviving,” as she made more progress, moving both arms and breathing on her own for the first time — just three days after a bullet shot through her brain.

Doctors emphasize she is in for a long recovery, and her neurosurgeon repeated his cautionary phrase of “she’s holding her own.” But there was no denying what was clearly good news.

Giffords, a three-time Democrat, remains in critical condition at Tucson’s University Medical Center where she was operated on Saturday after being shot during a meeting with constituents outside a Safeway supermarket. “I’m happy to say that she’s holding her own,” he said.

Giffords was shot Saturday during a meeting with constituents outside a grocery store. The attack killed six and injured 14 others. Six remained hospitalized.

Doctors previously reported Giffords raised two fingers of her left hand and gave a thumbs-up when responding to verbal commands. Now they say she is moving her arms.

Although her condition has remained virtually unchanged the past few days, doctors were hopeful. 

"She has a 101 percent chance of surviving,” said trauma chief Dr. Peter Rhee said. “She will not die. She does not have that permission from me.”

And while she can breathe on her own, Giffords still has a breathing tube in place as a precaution, said her neurosurgeon Dr. Michael Lemole.

In their briefing Tuesday, Doctors also reversed themselves in describing the path of the bullet. They now believe she was shot on the left side of the forehead, with the bullet exiting the back.

They previously thought she had been shot in the back of the head.

They came to the new conclusion after reviewing X-rays and brain scans and consulting with two outside physicians with experience treating combat victims who were brought in on Monday.

Giffords is lucky the bullet did not cross into both sides, or hemispheres, of the brain, which can leave lasting damage, her doctors have said.

As doctors continued to monitor Giffords’ recovery, details emerged about the care she received when she was rushed by ambulance to the hospital.

Trauma surgeon Dr. Randall Friese was the first to treat Giffords.

"I immediately went over to her bedside and began to coordinate her care,” he said.

That meant going through a checklist much like what a pilot would do before taking off. Doctors checked to make sure there weren’t any other bullet wounds, put in a breathing tube and assessed her mental state.

Despite not knowing if Giffords could hear him, Friese said he took her hand and told her that she was in the hospital and that doctors would take care of her.

"Then I said, ’Squeeze my hand, Mrs. Giffords.’ And she did,” recalled Friese.

He asked her several more times to press his hand and she responded.

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