- 19 Comments:
Here the author assumes that atherosclerotic plaques are the result
of alpha radiation induced eell mutations and suggests that the alpha
emitters responsible originate from the lung (presumably inhaled) because
the pulmonary arteries rarely develop atherosclerotic plaques.

This

would imply that inhaled alpha emitters that get into the blood are
trapped efficiently in their first passage in the blood stream through

the pulmonary veins, heart, coronary arteries, and perheps the rest. of
the vascular tree except that virtually none is left in the blood by the
time the blood reaches and services the pulmonary artery.

The author does

not discuss this matter, or the fate of alpha emitters absorbed from the
gastrointestinal tract, or the mechanisms by which alpha emitters may
be taken up so specially in aorta, coronary arteries, ett, on the first
passage of the blood containing them.
The sentences which are the subject of these comments represent a very
poor argument for the respiratory origin of the causative agent, for the
nature of the causative agent, or for the reason for the rarity of
‘atherosclerosis in the pulmonary artery.

It is highly unlikely that there

would be no alpha emitters passing through the blood of the pulmonary
artery or of its vasa vasorum after inhalation and ingestion of alpha
emitters that were in a state allowing them to pass into the blood.

Page 11, lines 8-10 - "Attempts to reproduce arterial lesions in
animals by chemical, mechanical and nutritional means have not produced
plaques similar to those of atherosclerosis in man
ym

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