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The Electrocardiogram in Angina Pectoris

MORRIS H. KAHN, M.A., M.D.
Ann Intern Med. 1931;4(12):1499-1508. doi:10.7326/0003-4819-4-12-1499
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An abundance of literature is devoted to the syndrome of angina pectoris. And yet, after two decades of the intensive use of the electrocardiograph in diagnosis in these cases, no general opinion has been reached as to the pathologic changes that underlie this distressing disease. The reason for this is to be found in the fact that angina pectoris is not a pathological entity. It is rather the clinical manifestation of disease processes in the heart muscle, in the coronary arteries or in the aorta, producing pain of more or less typical character. We must accept the possibility of different

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