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...Peter Stoler, "but it's being conquered. There's no question that if you get treatment you can live a lot longer." For the story, Stoler and Reporter-Researcher Jean Bergerud, a veteran of 22 years in the Medicine section, interviewed pioneer blood-pressure researcher Dr. John Laragh, our cover subject, and pored over such weighty medical tomes as Laragh's 900-page Hypertension Manual. Notes Senior Editor Leon Jaroff, who edited the story: "Hypertension sounds like a disease of nervous, high-strung individuals. Many people are embarrassed to admit that they have...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Letter From The Publisher, Jan. 13, 1975 | 1/13/1975 | See Source »

...BLOOD AND CLOTS. Hormone components of the Pill appear to "rev up" the chain reaction of yet other hormones that regulate blood pressure. Columbia University's Dr. John H. Laragh has seen 20 women whose blood pressure skyrocketed while they were on the Pill; presumably they were unusually sensitive to the hormonal effect. Women with kidney disease are especially susceptible. A related mechanism, said Laragh, explains some complaints of "feeling bloated" and gaining weight, usually during the first three or four months that a woman is taking the Pill; some of the hormones involved cause retention of salt...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: The Pros and Cons of the Pill | 5/2/1969 | See Source »

...manufacturers Merck Sharp & Dohme, though not yet released for general prescription use), taken by mouth, can be highly effective as a diuretic, stimulating the body to get rid of excess water, which causes edema (dropsy) in patients with enlarged and failing hearts. Columbia University's Dr. John H. Laragh and Dr. Felix E. Demartini reported that chlorothiazide works well by itself, also increases the effectiveness of other diuretics when given in small-dose combinations. In three cases where no drug worked alone, a combination did the trick. The A.H.A.'s new president. Dr. Robert W. Wilkins of Boston...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: Heart Advances | 11/11/1957 | See Source »

Apart from watching Author Shute trying to decide who are the less cultured, the Yanks or the Aussies, the reader may have some fun with the locale: Laragh Station, a sheep "run" operated by the Brothers Regan. They are graduate gunmen of the Irish Republican Army who are busy populating their underpopulated principality with a brood of half-caste children, some named sentimentally for great figures of the Irish Troubles. Overproof Queensland rum is their drink; mutton is their food; and once a year a priest arrives on the scene to christen the new children, and to tell the elders...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Books: The Wide Open Species | 8/20/1956 | See Source »

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