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  Vol. 102 No. 1, JULY 1958 TABLE OF CONTENTS
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The Fibrinogen Polymerization Test in Nonspecific Myocarditis and Pericarditis

RUDOLPH E. FREMONT, M.D.; SAMUEL LOSNER, M.D.; BRUNO W. VOLK, M.D.

AMA Arch Intern Med. 1958;102(1):41-49.

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 frequent involvement of the myocardium and pericardium in infections of bacterial, viral, and rickettsial origin is generally recognized. There remain, however, a good many cases of acute myocarditis and pericarditis of unknown etiology. This poses not only the academic problem of classification but the very practical question of management and prognosis. In the young and middle-aged patient rheumatic fever and tuberculosis and in the middleaged and elderly patient these as well as atypical coronary artery disease have to be considered frequently.

At present, the differential diagnosis is often difficult in spite of careful evaluation of the clinical data, electrocardiograms, roentgenograms, and all conventional laboratory tests, including the unspecific "acute phase reactants," such as erythrocyte sedimentation rate, C-reactive protein, and plasma fibrinogen concentration.

Recently Losner and Volk1 have observed the persistence of fibrinogen in citrated serum following gross coagulation of whole blood to which a critical dose of heparin . . . [Full Text PDF of this Article]


Author Affiliations

Brooklyn; With the Technical Assistance of Alice Einhorn

From the Cardiovascular Section of the Brooklyn Veterans' Administration Hospital (Dr. Fremont), the Isaac Albert Research Institute of the Jewish Chronic Disease Hospital (Drs. Losner and Volk), and the Department of Pathology of the Albert Einstein College of Medicine, (Dr. Volk), New York.


Footnotes

Submitted for publication Nov. 13, 1957.



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