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Canadian Medical Association Journal logoLink to Canadian Medical Association Journal
. 1964 Feb 8;90(6):395–400.

The Geographic Pathology of Coronary Atherosclerosis

R F Scott, A S Daoud, K T Lee
PMCID: PMC1922056  PMID: 14127981

Abstract

The purpose of these studies was to find large groups with significantly less coronary atherosclerosis than New Yorkers and to investigate the possible reasons for these differences. Direct comparison of hearts and measurements of coronary artery wall thickness, autopsy series, and clinical diagnoses of outpatients and hospital admissions revealed that the amount of coronary atherosclerosis and the number of myocardial infarcts is significantly less in East and West Africans compared to New Yorkers matched for age and sex. The factors producing these differences are apparently operative in childhood. East Africans were found to have a shorter blood clot-lysis time, fewer venous (and arterial) thromboemboli and lower serum lipid levels, with a lower relative percentage of serum linoleates, than age-matched New Yorkers.

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Selected References

These references are in PubMed. This may not be the complete list of references from this article.

  1. DAOUD A. S., GOODALE F., FLORENTIN R., BEADENKOPF W. G. Chemicoanatomic studies in geographic pathology. A practical method for the quantitation of coronary arteriosclerosis. Arch Pathol. 1962 Jan;73:74–81. [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
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