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media after 20 years of age, and emphasized that such deposits
increase with age and precede the formation of intimal plaques.
Blumenthal et 1. also observed that the ratio of calcium phosphate
to calcium carbonate in the aortas is similar to that in bone.
It should be pointed out here that whether or not the calcium
deposits in blood vessels may be regarded as an irritant leading to
damage and repair in the formation of, plaques, there are subtle to obvious
changes in parts of some blood vessels (e.g., aorta, coronary arteries,
renal arterioles) that somehow provide a receptive environment for
deposition of calcium (dystrophic calcification),

Calcium deposition

may be especially marked in conditions involving excessive demineralization
of bone, as in advanced osteoporosis of aging, osteitis fibrosa, and
parathyroid disorders,
from whatever cause.

and with elevation of blood levels of calciun,
The deposition of calcium in blood vessels as a

consequence of damage of bone of experimental animals after internal
administration of substantial doses of bone-seeking alpha emitters
has been observed,

¢} Elkeles (to whom the author referred) pointed out that certain radioactive substances are deposited with the calcium in the skeletal system.
He reported that in elderly patients, the alpha particle activity per
unit net weight of aorta, although variable, tended to follow the degree of

calcification.

He studied the abdominal aorta, coronary arteries,

pulmonary artery, and ribs and costal cartilage.

Ash % and alpha

activity rose with age only in the aorta and coronary arteries.

In

pulmonary arteries, ash % did not rise and alpha activity declined with age.

Pulmonary arteries were chosen as the control arteries because they are
histologically similar to aorta but not subject to atherosclerosis except

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