Ozzy Osbourne was "feeling good" as he was pictured leaving the hospital in a wheelchair with wife Sharon by his side following a "major operation" which she said was going to "determine the rest of his life."

The 73-year-old rock star wore black sweatpants and a long-sleeved shirt with hospital bracelets on his wrists as a medical professional guided the family out of the facility and to a waiting vehicle after his surgery. 

The family hasn't publicly discussed the medical procedure Ozzy had to undergo, but Sharon admitted Ozzy was "feeling good" on Wednesday in a throwback snap shared on Twitter of Ozzy standing at the microphone.

Ozzy also spoke out the same day, sharing that he is "now home from the hospital recuperating comfortably," the 73-year-old musician tweeted to his millions of followers. 

"I am definitely feeling the love and support from all my fans and send everyone a big thank you for their thoughts, prayers and well wishes during my recovery."

OZZY OSBOURNE HOME FROM HOSPITAL AND 'RECUPERATING COMFORTABLY,' THANKS FANS FOR 'PRAYERS' POST SURGERY

In the snapshots, Sharon, his wife of nearly 40 years, is seen following closely behind wearing a powder blue pantsuit. They both followed COVID-19 protocols and wore protective face masks as they left the health center.

Ozzy Osbourne, 73, seen in a wheelchair following 'major' surgery

Ozzy Osbourne pictured leaving the hospital with wife Sharon Osbourne on Wednesday following a "major operation." She later tweeted that the rock star was "feeling good" post surgery. (BACKGRID)

"Our family would like to express so much gratitude for the overwhelming amount of love and support leading up to Ozzy’s surgery," she wrote on Twitter Tuesday afternoon. 

"Ozzy is doing well and on the road to recovery. Your love means the world to him," she added with a praying hands emoji.

Last week, she indicated Ozzy's situation was challenging, and he would need a difficult surgery. She immediately flew back to the West Coast from London to be by his side. 

"He has a major operation on Monday, and I have to be there," she told her fellow TalkTV panelists last week. "It’s really going to determine the rest of his life." 

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A report has since surfaced stating that the procedure was to remove and realign pins in his neck and back. "Ozzy is 73 and any kind of surgery when you get older is difficult," a source told Page Six. "This is quite major. He’s having the pins in his neck and back realigned from when he had a fall back in 2019."

On Monday, both Sharon and Kelly were seen visiting the Black Sabbath frontman at the hospital hours after Sharon revealed his urgent medical needs. Kelly, 37, is currently pregnant with her first child with musician boyfriend Sid Wilson of SlipKnot. 

"He’s been in a lot of pain," the source noted of Ozzy's physical condition as of late.The "Prince of Darkness" will also reportedly require a "lengthy amount of convalescence" with round-the-clock care provided by a nurse at home.

Ozzy's back problems likely stem from the all-terrain vehicle collision in 2003 where he flipped his quad while riding around his property in London.

At the time, he had to undergo emergency surgery for "a broken collarbone, eight fractured ribs that were pinching crucial blood vessels and damaged vertebrae in his neck."

"I’m just waiting on some more surgery on my neck," he told Classic Rock magazine in May. "I can’t walk properly these days. I have physical therapy every morning. I am somewhat better, but nowhere near as much as I want to be to go back on the road."

When asked if he ever thought about his own mortality, Ozzy said he felt optimistic about his future as he looked back on the past.

"At f—ing 73, I’ve done pretty well," he said. "I don’t plan on going anywhere, but my time’s going to come."

He also addressed another challenging topic for the family — sobriety. After decades of alcohol and drug issues, Ozzy faced his substance abuse issues head on, and chose to get sober eight years ago.

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"I hope so," he said when asked if he's sober for life now. "I take it one day at a time. If I drink, I’ll drink. But I don’t want to drink today. I don’t want to smoke tobacco today. I don’t want to take drugs today. So today’s going to be okay, I suppose. I don’t know about tomorrow." 

Ozzy and Sharon's son Jack Osbourne, 36, has 18 years of sobriety under his belt, and while Kelly had a minor slip up in her sobriety journey last year, she's due to give birth to her first child this year.

Ozzy and Sharon also have a daughter Aimee, 38, who recently survived a fatal fire at a recording studio in Hollywood. Aimee escaped from the building unharmed with her producer.  

The Osbournes became a household name in the early 2000s when MTV shined a light into their lives as famous stars — and the children of rock royalty — with an unscripted show about the family. The series premiered in 2002 and ran for four seasons, with a final curtain call in 2005.

Ozzy Osbourne and Sharon Osbourne are pictured here in 2017.

Ozzy Osbourne and Sharon Osbourne are pictured here in 2017. (Greg Doherty/Getty Images)

In 2019, the Osbourne family spoke with Robin Roberts on "Good Morning America" about Ozzy's incident where he fell in the shower and dislodged metal screws in his spine (from the quad collision in 2003), requiring neck and back surgery. 

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"When I had the fall, it was pitch black," he recalled. "I went to the bathroom and I fell. I just fell and landed like a slam on the floor and I remember lying there thinking, ‘Well, you’ve done it now,’ really calm. Sharon [called] an ambulance. After that, it was all downhill."

Following the surgery and painful two-month recovery, he was forced to reschedule all of his 2019 live dates on his "No More Tours 2 Tour."

The family also opened up about Ozzy getting diagnosed with Parkinson's disease, a neuro-degenerative disorder which can cause tremors and balance issues, as well as slowness of movement. There is no known cure for the disease.

"It's PRKN 2," Sharon told GMA. "There's so many different types of Parkinson's; it's not a death sentence by any stretch of the imagination, but it does affect certain nerves in your body. And it's — it's like you have a good day, a good day, and then a really bad day."

Ozzy told the LA Times in 2020: "I’m not dying from Parkinson’s. I’ve been working with it most of my life. I’ve cheated death so many times. If tomorrow you read, ‘Ozzy Osbourne never woke up this morning,’ you wouldn’t go, ‘Oh, my God!’ You’d go, ‘Well, it finally caught up with him’."

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