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  Vol. 71 No. 3, September 1955 TABLE OF CONTENTS
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Peripheral Arteriosclerotic Vascular Disease in Diabetics

Results from Lumbar Sympathectomy and Comparative Analysis with Nondiabetic Patients

ROBERT E. L. BERRY, M.D.; C. THOMAS FLOTTE, M.D.

AMA Arch Surg. 1955;71(3):460-467.

Since this article does not have an abstract, we have provided the first 150 words of the full text PDF and any section headings.

The most important degenerative lesions concomitant with diabetes mellitus are those of the vascular system. Not only do these vascular lesions give rise to clinically important diseases involving the retina of the eye, coronary arteries, kidneys, nervous system, and all elements of the peripheral vascular tree, but they remain the most common cause of death in diabetics.1 Because of the association of diabetes and arteriosclerosis, the observation that the vascular lesions are of secondary causal relationship has been widely accepted. Moschowitz, however, has compared the incidence of hyperplastic arteriosclerosis in the aorta and pulmonary and coronary arteries of diabetics and nondiabetics dying of carcinoma, peptic ulcer, and essential hypertension. There was no significant difference.2 Furthermore, he found that in older diabetics 36% of men and 17.5% of women had a simultaneous onset of both diabetes and arteriosclerosis or that the diabetes developed subsequent to arteriosclerotic involvement. Boas has . . . [Full Text PDF of this Article]


Author Affiliations

Ann Arbor, Mich.

From the Department of Surgery, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, Michigan.


Footnotes

Received for publication April 25, 1955.

Read at the 12th Annual Meeting of the Central Surgical Association, Chicago, Feb. 18, 1955.



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