Updated

Former U.S. Marine Amir Hekmati, who was one of four Americans released by Iran as part of a prisoner swap, is in good health and looking forward to getting home soon, a congressman said Tuesday.

U.S. Rep. Dan Kildee, a Democrat from Hekmati's home state of Michigan, said he spent several hours with the 32-year-old, who was imprisoned in Iran for 4 ½ years before his release over the weekend.

"He has not had much of a chance to exercise and he's lost some weight but he looks fit and I think he is on the mend," Kildee told The Associated Press at the U.S. military's Landstuhl Regional Medical Center in southern Germany where Hekmati's being treated.

"A better diet and a chance to exercise... and I think he'll turn out to be just fine."

Hekmati, Washington Post reporter Jason Rezaian and pastor Saeed Abedini arrived late Sunday at Landstuhl for treatment. A fourth American released in exchange for the U.S. pardoning or dropping charges against seven Iranians opted to stay in Iran, and a fifth American was released separately.

Kildee said he had a steak dinner Monday night with Hekmati as well as Hekmati's two sisters and brother, and that he seemed in "pretty good spirits" for someone who had been incarcerated for so long.

"We talked a bit about his experience, but I think he was just appreciating his freedom and trying to enjoy it as much as he could," Kildee said.

Hekmati was detained in August 2011 on espionage charges. Hekmati says he went to Iran to visit family and spend time with his ailing grandmother. After his arrest, family members say they were told to keep the matter quiet.

He was convicted of spying and sentenced to death in 2012. After a higher court ordered a retrial, he was sentenced in 2014 to 10 years on a lesser charge.

Hekmati was born in Arizona and raised in Michigan. His family is in the Flint area. He and his family deny any wrongdoing, and say his imprisonment included physical and mental torture and long periods of solitary confinement in a tiny cell.

Kildee said he looked forward to talking more with Hekmati about his experience in the coming months but did already learn some details.

"We talked about a few of the aspects of his incarceration. (e) described the prison conditions as being bleak as we know them to be by reputation, described the fact that he had been told he was going to be released on several occasions, so even when this moment came he wasn't sure it was really true until he was at the airport," he said.

"In some ways that was another way to sort of provide psychological torture — to continue to torment him with his release."

For now, Hekmati is focused on getting home soon, though it's not yet clear when he'll be released from the hospital.

"He's really anxious to see his parents," Kildee said. "His father's quite ill — he was healthy when Amir went into prison and he's quite ill now — so I know that's an important part of the reunion."

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Rising reported from Berlin. David Runk in Detroit contributed to this story.