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  Vol. 47 No. 5, May 1931 TABLE OF CONTENTS
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PROGRESSIVE THROMBOSIS OF THE PULMONARY ARTERY

CLARENCE H. BOSWELL, M.D.; HAROLD D. PALMER, M.D.

Arch Intern Med. 1931;47(5):799-805.

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

Although the fatal pulmonary thromboses usually follow major operations or are postpuerperal, yet purely medical thrombi do occur, and in the artery the latter are more frequently primary than embolic. The facts that the pulmonary artery functions as a vein and that the blood it conveys is more venous than that in any other vein lead it to the same thrombotic accidents to which veins elsewhere are subjected. Sepsis, anesthesia, atheromatous changes, stasis in the blood stream and low blood pressure all predispose to the formation of a thrombus, and the case reported here illustrates, we believe, such a combination of etiologic factors.

REPORT OF CASE

History.

—A shop foreman, aged 39, entered Rockford Hospital on Oct. 20, 1929, complaining of a general sense of unrest, malaise, anorexia, palpitation, shortness of breath, easy fatigue and some aching through the chest. He had always been a hard worker. Four weeks prior . . . [Full Text PDF of this Article]


Author Affiliations

ROCKFORD, ILL.

From the Departments of Internal Medicine and Pathology of Rockford Hospital.


Footnotes

Submitted for publication, Oct. 5, 1930.



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