nation to suggest any known type of heart disease, nor has any evidence developed in the ensuing 25 years to suggest it. At 68 years of age her blood Fig. 3.-ECG taken îuly 8, 1959; normal tracing. pressure remains normal and her heart is normal on physical, roentgenographic and electrocardiographs examinations ( fig. 2, 3). This case is unique because of the unusually long follow-up. The fact that the heart has remained clinically normal, measured by the strictest standards, over 25 years of active life would appear to offer convincing proof of the absence of significant myocardial disease. Thus, this case may be accepted as sound evidence that (1) auricular fibrillation per se may produce severe congestive heart failure in an otherwise normal heart, and (2) this type of heart disease may be completely and permanently reversed by establishment and maintenance of normal sinus rhythm after compensation has been restored.Long survivals after the diagnosis of dissecting aneurysm are rare. The course of a patient suffering from dissecting aneurysm was followed by one of us (E.S.O.) for 16 of the 19 years she lived after this diagnosis was made. A review of the literature indicates that this may be the longest survival of a patient in whom a clear-cut antemortem diagnosis was made at the time of the dissection.
Report of a CaseA 59-year-old married woman was first seen at Duke Hospital in 1941. Her medical history revealed that she had always been susceptible to infection. Besides the usual childhood diseases, she had had pneumonia, scarlet fever, typhoid fever, and puerperal sepsis. In 1929, hypertension was first noted, with the systolic pressure at about 260 mm.Hg. In 1933, she underwent a hysterectomy and right oophorectomy for chronic pelvic inflammatory disease. A preoperative examination had reported the heart to be normal. The blood pressure at that time was 180/90 mm.Hg, and serologic findings were normal. No roentgenogram of the heart was taken.She remained fairly well until January, 1938, when, while standing before a mirror one afternoon, she was seized by a severe crushing precordial pain that radiated straight through to the back but not into the arms or neck. She was short of breath, became nauseated, and was taken immediately to the hospital. On admission her blood pressure was recorded as 180/90 mm.Hg. The pulse and respiration rates were normal. The heart was described as being enlarged to the left. There was a grade 2 systolic murmur at the apex and a grade 3 systolic murmur at the pulmonic area which radiated to the left clavicle, the suprecalvicular notch,