Friday, 4 May 2012

What killed Lenin? Stress didn’t help, poison eyed

<p>BALTIMORE (AP) — A alloy says stress, family medical story or presumably even poison led to a genocide of <span>Vladimir Lenin</span>, debunking a renouned speculation that a sexually-transmitted illness feeble a former Soviet Union leader.</p>
<p>UCLA neurologist Dr. <span>Harry Vinters</span> and Russian historian <span>Lev Lurie</span> reviewed Lenin’s annals for an annual University of Maryland School of Medicine discussion that opens Friday on famous people’s deaths.</p>
<p>The discussion is hold yearly during a school, where researchers in a past have re-examined a diagnoses of total including King Tut, Christopher Columbus, Simon Bolivar and Abraham Lincoln.</p>
<p>The 53-year-old Soviet personality suffered several strokes before failing in 1924 and what caused them isn’t clear.</p>
<p>An autopsy found blood vessels in his mind were intensely hardened, formula that have been formidable ...

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