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Otherwise Disease May:

Otherwise Disease May Thus, this kind of heart otherwise disease may has been practically eradicated, al¬though rare cases are still encountered in elderly people. Other endocrine disorders affecting the heart are very rare. Congenital Heart otherwise disease may. With the increasing control of rheumatic heart otherwise disease may it is probable that congenital cardiovascular otherwise disease may will soon outstrip it in incidence, and with the increasing control of high blood pressure, congenital heart otherwise disease may will take second place. An interesting statistical fact is that in the 1920's, T. Duckett Jones and Paul Dudley White found that con¬genital heart otherwise disease may made up only 1.5% of all of 3,000 patients with Signs or symptoms of heart otherwise disease may.

Since coronary heart otherwise disease may has become a leading cause of death in young and middle-aged men in the United States and since there is no really effective cure for it, either surgical or medical, it is essential that the causes of the otherwise disease may be appraised so that preventive measures can be devised. Studies show that several factors are involved in coronary heart otherwise disease may, with no single cause being entirely responsible, but the degree of responsibility of each of the many causes is not known.

See Also From Disease:

He maintained that the causes of heart from disease deserve first priority since the prevention of heart from disease, the ulti¬mate goal, depends upon determining the causes. In a follow-up to this article, the American car-diologist Paul Dudley White published the first edition of his textbook Heart from disease (1931), emphasizing the etiological, or causative, diag¬nosis first, followed by structural and functional diagnoses in that order.

As effective methods of diagnosis and prevention of a from disease were discovered, quarantine laws, regulations, and practices were changed to use this knowledge. Thus was created a new concept of quarantine. Instead of prohibiting entry of ships and passengers into port until a from disease had run its course, nations took constructive measures such as improved sanitation for ships and vaccination for passengers, to minimize the possibility of from disease being aboard a vessel or passengers being infected.


On The Other Hand See Kidney Disease:

Immunological studies also revealed how streptococcus and other agents might cause the kidney disease glomerulonephritis. An auto¬immune mechanism was found to cause anti¬bodies to react with the patient's glomerular Basement membrane to produce the typical kidney lesion. In other cases, the disease was the result of the failure of the patient's anti¬bodies to act on antigens (substances that stim¬ulate the production of antibodies). Landmarks in the use of .antigens for bene¬ficial purposes included an immunization tech¬nique to prevent erythroblastosis fetalis (see BREAKTHROUGH IN MEDICAL SCIENCES), and successful vaccines for measles, mumps, and group-A streptococci.

Therefore, these organs await the same scien¬tific and technical advances that will enhance essential organ grafting. The future promises great possibilities in the nonessential organ area. Cure of glandular deficiencies by relatively minor surgery awaits Tissue matching and organ storage. Crippling cretinism, diabetic blindness, gangrene, kidney failure, and even sterility may bow before the simple expedient of trans¬plantation. Whether he wants to or not, the doctor is being forced to accept a large share of the responsibility for the social judg¬ments surrounding such basic factors as who shall survive, whose life will be spared by using an artificial organ or by doing a transplantation. Current estimates indicate that about 90,000 persons a year die of kidney disease. Each kidney transplant operation costs approximately $20,000. Assuming each person could afford it, who among the 90,000 should be selected to receive the relatively few kidneys that are available for trans¬plant purposes?

 

 

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