SANTA CLARA, Calif. -- San Francisco 49ers coach Jim Harbaugh was sent to the hospital Thursday for a "minor procedure" after doctors discovered he had an irregular heartbeat.
The 49ers insist Harbaugh's procedure is "not a major cause of concern; it's more precautionary," a source told ESPN. The source said Harbaugh began experiencing chest pain on Wednesday.
As it turns out, Harbaugh made an appearance Thursday at the team's training facility and practice before doctors recommended he go home, according to a team source. The 49ers fully expect Harbaugh to return to work and practice on Friday.
Based on the fact that doctors believe they've corrected the problem, Harbaugh, barring an unexpected setback, will work Monday night's home game against the NFC North-leading (7-2) Chicago Bears (7-2) in his normal capacity.
"It's one of those things that, like coach Harbaugh always tells us, he's tougher than a $2 steak," 49ers linebacker Patrick Willis said. "We know he's going to be all right. We know we have a bunch of great coaches here that keep everything on track, and we're going to practice today as if he was here."
The 49ers also are expected to make a decision Friday on the status of quarterback Alex Smith, who is recovering from a concussion. He was cleared for non-contact practice and participated in the team's first workout of the week Thursday. But suddenly, his recovery from a concussion is the team's second-biggest injury concern.
Team spokesman Bob Lange said no incident with Harbaugh had occurred at the facility. Instead, the coach had visited with doctors Wednesday night after feeling ill, and they advised him to have the procedure done at Stanford Hospital.
Players were informed of Harbaugh's hospitalization by assistant head coach and special-teams coordinator Brad Seely during Thursday morning's walkthrough. Seely also oversaw team meetings and the afternoon practice.
Players said the news caught them by surprise.
"He was pretty good. We were slapping hands and talking yesterday," 49ers safety Dashon Goldson said of Harbaugh. "I didn't see anything. He showed no emotions. He didn't show anything like that."
Added Willis: "He seemed fine to me. He actually sat right behind me in meetings. He seemed fine. I didn't know anything was wrong. But like I said, we know he's going to be all right."
The 48-year-old Harbaugh won NFL Coach of the Year honors in his first season with the 49ers after coming over from Stanford, where he had engineered a Cardinal resurgence. He won the Orange Bowl in his final year on The Farm and groomed Andrew Luck into the eventual No. 1 overall draft pick of the Indianapolis Colts.
The always intense coach's impact was immediately felt up the road in San Francisco.
Harbaugh led the 49ers to a 13-3 record in the regular season and back to the playoffs for the first time since the 2002-03 season. They lost 20-17 in overtime to the New York Giants in the NFC Championship Game on Jan. 22.
Harbaugh, a 15-year NFL quarterback who starred at Michigan in college, has always tried to outwork the competition.
Most recently, Harbaugh and his wife, Sarah, welcomed their first son Sept. 4 -- and Harbaugh didn't even have to miss a full practice, just an afternoon walkthrough. Jack Jr., named after Harbaugh's father, was the couple's third child, joining two big sisters, Addison and Katherine.
San Francisco scout team safety Michael Thomas played at Stanford under Harbaugh and has known the coach since Thomas was a 17-year-old recruit from Houston. He said he has seen Harbaugh -- whom he calls a mentor and friend -- exhaust himself for years but never imagined his health could be in jeopardy.
Thomas sent Harbaugh a text message to wish him well -- and not to hurry back until he's healthy.
"In his mind, he's serious, like I never get sick, I never take a day off, blah, blah, blah," Thomas said. "To actually see something like this happen to a man who's so passionate about his job and about this team, to see him be taken away, you wish him well but you know it's just killing him not being here."
Notes
Smith practiced in a non-contact black jersey for the second straight day. He hopes to play against the Bears, but there are still further steps for him to be medically cleared after sustaining a concussion in the second quarter against the St. Louis Rams on Sunday. ... Rookie LaMichael James, the former Oregon running back, has a friendly wager this week with Thomas. Whoever's school wins Saturday's game between top-ranked Oregon and No. 14 Stanford has to wear the other team's gear all next week.
Information from ESPN NFL Insider Adam Schefter, ESPN's Ed Werder and The Associated Press was used in this report.