- 20 Comments:
The author's reference (40) is to the paper by Benditt and Benditt

(1973), whose statement in this matter is as follows: “Chemical,
mechanical, and nutritional manipulations have been used in animals
in an effort to reproduce lesions like those of atherosclerosis in
man:

none of these experimental lesions yields wholly satisfactory copies

of lesions of the human disease. _
The next sentence in the

Benditt and Benditt paper is as follows:

* Spontaneous atherosclerosis occurs in chickens and, as we have found,
produces lesions that strikingly resemble those of men.

The fact that certain types of experimental manipulation may have
failed so far to reproduce wholly satisfactory copies of lesions of the
human discése does not mean that some of those lesions which have been
“produced are wholly irrelevant or that radiation is the only egent that

would be perfectly successful.

Experimental manipulation with radiation

has not succeeded in meeting this requirement either,

Since other animals

are not wholly like humans it has been difficult, but it is not necessarily
impossible for the future, to produce good copies of the human disease
by experimental manipulation of factors other than radiation.

Perhaps

investigation of the spontaneous lesions in chickens would provide

valuable clues,
Page’11, lines 10-12 - "However atherosclerotic plaques have been
directly induced in human arteries by intensive irradiation with x-rays
and radium
au
Comments:

The reference (45) is to a paper by Sheehan (1944) on what Sheehan
calls an uncommon or at least rarely described lesion, i.e., foam cell
plaque, observed in the intima of irradiated small arteries (100 to 500

Select target paragraph3