This study examined life expectancy and serum lipids in 120 men with atherosclerotic coronary heart disease. Five-year survival from onset of infarction was 79 per cent. No relationship could be demonstrated between survival and the level of the total serum cholesterol, Std. S
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0-12, 12-20, 20-100, and 100-400 lipoproteins. Survival for patients with an infarct less than 6 months before entry into the study was shorter, despite serum lipid levels the same as the remainder of the group.
Although the age of onset of coronary disease is influenced by serum lipid levels, survival subsequent to infarction is not. This paradox suggests that serum lipids affect rate of atherogenesis in the long preclinical stage but in the short clinical stage other factors determine survival.
Mild myasthenia gravis patients were compared with normals with respect to the capacity of their motor nerve endings (MNEs) to generate a neostigmine-induced postactivation repetition (PAR). Dose-response analyses of PAR recorded from muscle electrically and by contractile measurement disclose a loss of this pharmacologic responsiveness in myasthenia. Since mild myasthenics transmitted nerve impulse trains of 20 to 200 Hz, as did normals, it was evident that PAR is transmitted insofar as it can be generated by MNEs. The dose-response analyses support this. These data indicate an MNE disorder in the disease.
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