Natural Eradication of High Cholesterol
Levels
Worldwide, hundreds of millions of people have elevated
blood levels of cholesterol, triglycerides, LDL (low-density
lipoproteins), lipoprotein (a) and other risk factors. However,
cholesterol and all other blood risk factors are considered only
“
secondary” risk factors because they can only cause damage if
the the blood vessel wall is already weakened by vitamin deficiencies.
Thus, elevated blood levels of cholesterol and other
blood risk factors are not the cause of cardiovascular disease —
they are the consequence of the ongoing vascular disease.
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Cellular Health
Conventional medicine, based on pharmaceutical drugs, is
limited to treating the symptoms of cardiovascular disease
while ignoring the root cause — blood vessel weakness. Marketing
campaigns for cholesterol-lowering drugs simply proclaim
cholesterol as the “scapegoat.” The latest type of these
drugs (statins), which blocks the synthesis of cholesterol is
being used by millions of people in the hope for treatment.
However, the underlying weakness of the blood vessel wall
continues untreated. According to the January 3, 1996 edition
of the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA),
statins are known to cause cancer and other severe side effects,
and “should be avoided whenever possible.”
Modern Cellular Medicine provides a new understanding
about the factors causing the rise of cholesterol and other secondary
risk factors, as well as their natural prevention. Cholesterol,
triglycerides, low-density lipoproteins (LDL), lipoprotein
(a) and other metabolic products are ideal repair factors, and
their blood levels increase in response to a structural weakening
of the artery walls. A chronic weakness of the blood vessel
walls increases the demand and, thereby, the production rate
of these repair molecules in the liver.
An increased production
of cholesterol and other repair factors in the liver increases the
levels of these molecules in the bloodstream and, over time,
renders them risk factors for cardiovascular disease. Thus, the
primary measure for lowering cholesterol and other secondary risk factors
in the bloodstream is to stabilize the artery walls and,
thereby, decrease the metabolic demand for increased production
of these risk factors in the liver. Therefore, it is not surprising
that Dr. Rath’s Cellular Health recommendations help to stabilize
the artery walls and, at the same time, help to decrease
blood levels of cholesterol and other risk factors naturally.
Cellular Medicine helps to expand the understanding about
the different factors influencing one’s personal risk factor profile.
Your basic levels of cholesterol and other blood risk factors
are genetically determined and cannot be changed. The
two factors you can influence to lower your risk are diet and —
above all — intake of specific essential nutrients that regulate
cellular metabolism.
Scientific research and clinical studies have already documented
the particular value of vitamin C, vitamin B3 (nicotinate),
vitamin B5 (pantothenate), vitamin E and carnitine, as
well as other components of Dr. Rath’s Cellular Health recommendations,
for lowering elevated cholesterol levels and other
secondary risk factors in the blood.
How Vitamins and Other Nutritional Supplements
Can Help Patients With Elevated Cholesterol Levels
Interestingly, some patients report a transitory rise in cholesterol
levels when they start taking vitamins. Because the rise in
blood cholesterol levels is not the result of increased cholesterol
production, it has to come from other sources — primarily
atherosclerotic deposits in the artery walls. This important mechanism
was first described by Dr. Constance Spittle in the
medical journal The Lancet in 1972. She reported that vitamin
supplementation in patients with existing cardiovascular disease
frequently led to a temporary increase of cholesterol levels
in the blood. In contrast, the cholesterol levels of healthy
test persons did not rise with vitamin supplementation.
The temporary rise in cholesterol is an additional sign of the
healing process in the artery walls and the decreasing of fatty
deposits. The mechanism described here is, of course, not only
valid for cholesterol, but also for triglycerides, LDL, lipoprotein
(a) and other secondary risk factors, which have accumulated
over decades inside the artery walls and have been slowly
released into the bloodstream.
Should your cholesterol
levels rise when you start following these recommendations, it
can indicate the reversal of existing deposits in your artery
walls. You should continue the vitamin program until, after
several months, the blood level of cholesterol decreases below
the initial values. A diet high in soluble fiber (e.g. oat bran,
cereals and pectins) can further decrease cholesterol and other
secondary risk factors in the blood.
The effect of vitamin C on the blood levels of cholesterol and
other blood fats has been documented in numerous clinical
studies. More than 40 of these studies have been evaluated by
Dr. Harrie Hemilä of the University of Helsinki, Finland. In
patients with high initial cholesterol values (above 270 mg per
deciliter), vitamin C supplementation was able to decrease
cholesterol levels up to 20%. In contrast, patients with low and
medium initial values of cholesterol showed only a slight cholesterol-
lowering effect or the levels stayed the same.
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Cellular Health |