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MOST textbooks do not comment upon the mor- tality rate of cardiac infarction in diabetics, although ischaimic heart disease is said to be common amongst them. Paul Wood ( This statement is presumably based upon the findings of Mintz and Katz (1947), who reviewed a series of cases seen between I940 and I945. Of their 572 cases, 85 were diabetic. These authors corre- lated mortality rate and sex, and found it to be i8.6% of non-diabetic males against 27.8% of diabetic and 28.9% of non-diabetic females against 36.7% of diabetic. Later, Katz, Mills and Cisneros (1949), following up the same series, stated that the long-term survival of a diabetic, if alive after two months, is the same as that of a non-diabetic. However, Cole, Singian and Katz (1954) found that diabetes did not affect the immediate outcome, but did shorten long-term survival. Similarly, Doscher and Poindexter (1950), in their own series, found the overall acute mortality was 15.5% among all types of patient and i5.6% among the diabetics. They also re-
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R. J. Jarrett (Sat,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/6a085302113ba5b476de17d6 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1136/pgmj.37.426.207
R. J. Jarrett
Postgraduate Medical Journal
King's College Hospital
Guy's Hospital
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