The account by “our medical correspondent” of King George VI’s demise on the    front page of The Daily Telegraph of February 7  1952 – reproduced to mark    the 60th anniversary of the Queen’s  accession to the throne – is of some     medical significance. The King’s later years were dogged by ill health,    including intermittent claudication due to narrowing of the arteries    requiring the operation of lumbar sympathectomy, where cutting the nerves to    the legs improves the circulation.
  Next there was “the unrelenting course of the King’s lung trouble”, warranting    the resection of a malignant growth, and, finally, he succumbed to a    coronary thrombosis due to a clot in the artery to the heart. 
The King was, in short, testament to the dangers of smoking, suffering three of its major harmful effects – though tactfully the report does not mention this. He was just 56, and one feels the tenor of post-war Britain would have been quite different had he abjured the habit. He would almost certainly have lived on for another two or three decades.
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