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Promise Is Seen in New AIDS Drugs [Newspaper Article]

Altman, Lawrence K
Researchers at a meeting in Florence Italy said several new experimental drugs hold promise for improved treatment of two of the infections from which AIDS patients most commonly die, toxoplasmosis and pneumocystis pneumonia
PROQUEST:3563785
ISSN: 0362-4331
CID: 85550

Dr. Irvine H. Page Is Dead at 90; Pioneered Hypertension Research [Newspaper Article]

Altman, Lawrence K
Irvine H. Page, a physician whose research helped shape the modern understanding and treatment of heart attacks, died Jun 10, 1991 at age 90 of a heart attack
PROQUEST:3563196
ISSN: 0362-4331
CID: 85551

2 More Patients of Florida Dentist Are Infected with AIDS Virus [Newspaper Article]

Altman, Lawrence K
Two more patients of a Florida dentist, David J. Acer, have become infected with the same strain of the AIDS virus that killed him, bringing to five the number of patients known to have been infected by him in his practice, Florida health officials said
PROQUEST:3562525
ISSN: 0362-4331
CID: 85552

New Therapy Combats 2 Types of Racing Heart [Newspaper Article]

Altman, Lawrence K
Using short blasts of heat delivered through a tiny tube, doctors are curing more than 90% of patients with two types of racing heart without surgery or long-term drug therapy, new studies show
PROQUEST:3562472
ISSN: 0362-4331
CID: 85553

Clue to Bushes' Disease Sought in Water [Newspaper Article]

Altman, Lawrence K
Sanitary engineers are testing the drinking water at the White House and three other residences in their search for a clue to why President Bush, his wife, Barbara, and their dog, Millie, all have autoimmune ailments, White House officials said
PROQUEST:3561387
ISSN: 0362-4331
CID: 85554

Bush residences checked for possible link to illnesses Even Millie has an autoimmune ailment, officials say [Newspaper Article]

Altman, Lawrence K
Sanitary engineers are testing the drinking water at the White House and three other residences to determine whether chemicals might have triggered autoimmune ailments in President Bush, his wife, Barbara, and their dog, Millie, White House officials said Tuesday. Water taken from Camp David and Walker's Point, the Bushes' summer home in Kennebunkport, Maine, are being tested. Water is also being analyzed at the vice president's residence on the grounds of the US Naval Observatory in northwestern Washington, where the Bushes lived from 1981 to 1989 while Bush was vice president. BLACK & WHITE PHOTO; President Bush leaves a Kennebunkport, Maine, drugstore with a bag of unknown contents after a round of golf at the Cape Arundel Golf Club on Tuesday. His residences are being checked for health reasons. (AP) caption: Leader of the pack George Bush (A02) (AFP); Credit: Agence France-Presse:The Associated Press
PROQUEST:152928221
ISSN: 0886-4934
CID: 85555

Link sought among similar diagnoses on Bushes, pet Millie [Newspaper Article]

Altman, Lawrence K
President Bush, like his wife, Barbara, has received a diagnosis of Graves' disease, an autoimmune ailment of unknown cause. It is rare enough for a husband and wife to contract the disease, which is not known to be communicable. Even odder is that [Millie], the Bushes' dog, also has an autoimmune disease, one known as lupus. The cluster of cases may be pure coincidence. But could whatever caused Millie's lupus also have induced the Graves' disease that has afflicted Bush and his wife? Last summer, 3 1/2 years after she joined the Bush household, Millie, a springer spaniel who has been the subject of a best-selling book, developed what was later diagnosed as lupus. The uncommon disorder of humans and dogs can cause anemia, arthritis, kidney damage and a butterfly-shaped rash on the face
PROQUEST:82726167
ISSN: 0199-8560
CID: 85556

First dog Millie has illness, too/Medical mystery at White House [Newspaper Article]

Altman, Lawrence K
President [Marvin Bush], like his wife, Barbara, has received a diagnosis of Graves' disease, an autoimmune ailment of unknown cause. It is rare enough for a husband and wife to contract the disease, which is not known to be communicable. Even odder is that [Millie], the Bushes' dog, also has an autoimmune disease, one known as lupus. The cluster of cases, of course, may be pure coincidence. But could whatever caused Millie's lupus also have induced the Graves' disease that has afflicted Bush and his wife? That is a possibility that has intrigued medical experts around the country, and it is now being considered by the president's physician, Burton Lee. Last summer, 3 1/2 years after she joined the Bush household, Millie, a springer spaniel who has been the subject of a best-selling book, developed what was later diagnosed as lupus. The uncommon disorder of humans and dogs can cause a butterfly-shaped rash on the face, anemia, arthritis and kidney damage. Lupus is considered a classic model of an autoimmune disease
PROQUEST:64430500
ISSN: 1074-7109
CID: 85557

Handling of Transplant AIDS Cases Studied [Newspaper Article]

Altman, Lawrence K
Federal health officials are looking into whether there were unnecessary delays in searching for recipients of organs and tissues from the body of a Virginia man apparently infected with the AIDS virus. At issue is whether the hospital should have informed state officials of their suspicions sooner
PROQUEST:3561306
ISSN: 0362-4331
CID: 85558

THE DOCTOR'S WORLD; A White House Puzzle: Immunity Ailments [Newspaper Article]

Altman, Lawrence K
The President's disease was diagnosed this month, the First Lady's in January 1990, and [Millie]'s last summer. So in a span of 16 months, three members of the Bush household have contracted a disease in which the immune system, for unknown reasons, interferes with the body's own tissues. The cluster of cases, of course, may be pure coincidence. But could whatever caused Millie's lupus also have induced the [Graves]' disease that has afflicted Mr. Bush and his wife? That is a possibility that has intrigued medical experts around the country, and it is now being considered by the President's physician, Dr. Burton J. Lee 3d. Graves' disease is much more common in women than men for reasons that remain uncertain. The Bushes' doctors have called the coincidence bizarre and have cited chances of one in three million that a husband and wife will develop Graves' disease. Other experts, like Dr. Paul W. Ladenson, at Johns Hopkins Hospital in Baltimore, have come up with an estimate of one in 100,000
PROQUEST:967467361
ISSN: 0362-4331
CID: 85559