A critical analysis of clinical histories from patients with high blood pressure was undertaken to identify unsuspected relationships, though no quantitative results are reported in the abstract.
Observational
CONTENTS Material studied. Sex distribution. Proportion of living and dead. Age distribution. Distribution by height of systolic blood-pressures. Symptoms associated with hypertension: Cardiac symptoms. Renal symptoms. Cerebral symptoms. General symptoms. Symptoms depending upon other diseases. Causes of death and the relation of early symptoms to them: Distribution by causes of death. Sex distribution. Age in relation to causes of death. The relation of blood-pressure to causes of death. Distribution by symptoms. The relation of blood-pressure to early symptoms. The relation of early symptoms to causes of death. The study here reported was begun a year and a half ago. It was undertaken primarily with a view to determining whether or not a critical analysis of a large group of histories of persons with high blood-pressure would disclose any hitherto unsuspected relations
Theodore C. Janeway (Mon,) conducted a observational in Hypertensive cardiovascular disease. A critical analysis of clinical histories from patients with high blood pressure was undertaken to identify unsuspected relationships, though no quantitative results are reported in the abstract.
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