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Like so many research triumphs, this one had been almost an accident. Thirteen years ago a London, Ont. obstetrician named Evan Vere Shute became interested in vitamin E, whose natural sources are in whole grain; he had a hunch that it produced a salutary effect on heart and blood vessels. When a fellow member of his church-his only male patient-complained of tremendous heart pains, Shute put him experimentally on cold, pressed wheat-germ oil. For three months he got relief. When both patient and doctor ran out of funds, the treatment was abandoned...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: The E in Hearts | 6/10/1946 | See Source »

...Evan Shute did not forget it. Last summer, when a colleague asked him to suggest a research project for a bright young medical student, Floyd Skelton, Shute suggested tests for the effectiveness of vitamin E against hemorrhage. At the University of Western Ontario Skelton set to work on his class-free Saturday afternoons, with a modest grant of $150 and laboratory privileges from his alma mater. He soon discovered that dogs given stiff jolts of vitamin E would not have hemorrhages...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: The E in Hearts | 6/10/1946 | See Source »

Impressed, Dr. Shute decided to try the experiment on humans, using Skelton's principle of large, concentrated doses of the vitamin. A friend, Dr. Arthur Berge Francis Vogelsang, had just the man: a 68-year-old pensioner who was dying of hypertensive heart disease and hemorrhages, was due to have his spleen removed the next day. The attending surgeon was willing to try the vitamin, since he was afraid the patient would die on the operating table. Within a week after treatment the old man was out of bed, bustling around the hospital ward and helping nurses with...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: The E in Hearts | 6/10/1946 | See Source »

Large, concentrated doses of vitamin E, said Dr. Vogelsang, benefited four types of heart ailment (95% of the total): arteriosclerotic, hypertensive, rheumatic, old & new coronary heart disease. The vitamin helps a failing heart. It eliminates anginal pain. It is nontoxic. But, he warned, it must be taken continuously, like digitalis and insulin, and must not be taken simultaneously with other drugs...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: The E in Hearts | 6/10/1946 | See Source »

...Canadian doctors believe that vitamin E prevents the destruction of the platelets (small, light grey corpuscles which probably play a role in the clotting of the blood) and increases the blood supply to the individual muscles of the heart, thus effecting muscle repair. Their research indicated that the tremendous increase in heart disease deaths might be due to overrefinement of foods-the polishing of rice, removal of vitamin values from flour, growing of vegetables in greenhouses (thus excluding ultraviolet light), picking of green oranges. All these deprive humans of their ordinary supply of vitamin...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Medicine: The E in Hearts | 6/10/1946 | See Source »

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