Pyridostigmin (Mestinon) in the Treatment of Myasthenia Gravis

Abstract
BEFORE 1935 myasthenia gravis was an unfamiliar neurologic oddity, unresponsive to therapy and carrying a high mortality. In that year the injection of neostigmine was shown by Viets and Schwab1 to provide a rapid and specific diagnostic test. As a result hundreds of new cases were identified. A year later Everts2 reported that patients could be maintained on tablets of neostigmine given by mouth, and from this point on the successful treatment of myasthenia gravis began.For nearly eighteen years neostigmine has been the mainstay of therapy in restoring hopeless invalids. unable to swallow food, to nearly normal activity. In . . .

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