CORONARY HEART DISEASE AND XANTHOMA TUBEROSUM ASSOCIATED WITH HEREDITARY HYPERLIPEMIA
- 1 December 1949
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Medical Association (AMA) in Archives of internal medicine (1960)
- Vol. 84 (6) , 1002-1019
- https://doi.org/10.1001/archinte.1949.00230060159012
Abstract
CLINICAL investigations concerning disturbances in lipid metabolism have opened a new chapter in the etiology of coronary heart disease. Recent studies have revealed an extremely high incidence of xanthomas and specific types of heart disease associated with hyperlipemia, especially hypercholesteremia. The earlier investigators were concerned mainly with the etiology of xanthomatous lesions of the skin and tendons. These deposits have long been considered medical curiosities, and even today little is known concerning their formation. Tuberous xanthomas were first described by Addison and Gull,1 in 1851, but it was not until 1920 that Chauffard. Laroche and Grigaut2 and Burns3 demonstrated that there was an increased amount of total serum cholesterol in patients with xanthomas. In 1929, Wile, Eckstein and Curtis4 stated that the formation of xanthomas could not be explained solely by the theory of hypercholesteremia and that a defect in fat metabolism, in which cholesterol undoubtedlyThis publication has 12 references indexed in Scilit:
- Coronary artery disease in men eighteen to thrity-nine years of ageAmerican Heart Journal, 1948
- Hereditary disturbance of cholesterol metabolism: A factor in the genesis of atherosclerosisAmerican Heart Journal, 1948
- XANTHOMA TUBEROSUM, AORTIC STENOSIS, CORONARY SCLEROSIS AND ANGINA PECTORISAmerican Journal of Diseases of Children, 1947
- SERUM CHOLESTEROL LEVEL IN CORONARY ARTERIOSCLEROSISArchives of internal medicine (1960), 1943
- A LONG TERM STUDY OF THE VARIATION OF SERUM CHOLESTEROL IN MAN 1Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1939
- AN ARTICLE CONTRIBUTED TO AN ANNIVERSARY VOLUME IN HONOR OF DOCTOR JOSEPH HERSEY PRATTAnnals of Internal Medicine, 1938
- AN ARTICLE CONTRIBUTED TO AN ANNIVERSARY VOLUME IN HONOR OF DOCTOR JOSEPH HERSEY PRATTAnnals of Internal Medicine, 1937
- THE BLOOD LIPIDS IN THE POSTABSORPTIVE STATE AND AFTER THE INGESTION OF FAT IN NORMAL HUMAN SUBJECTS AND IN A CASE OF DISSEMINATED CUTANEOUS XANTHOMATA 1Journal of Clinical Investigation, 1934
- LIPID STUDIES IN XANTHOMAArchives of Dermatology, 1929
- Studies on the cholesterol content of normal human plasmaBiochemical Journal, 1928