Treatment for Reducing Arterial Plaque and Imflammatory Cells:
I would like to start this as a focused topic.
Background: I’m 69, have followed Bill Faloon / Life extension protocols for about 10 years. Doing the Dasatinib / Quercetin and Rapamycin treatments since mid last year. I have very low body fat, eat very healthy and have outstanding blood work. Model ldl/GSK triglycerides. Very low inflammatory markers.
Now I have 2 stints. Fixed 95 and 90% blockages in two main arteries. I was fortunate to go in to ER before some serious heart damage happened.
So digging into why: Plaque accumulation on the inner area of the artery wall.
So for me, figuring out how to REDUCE plaque seems like the biggest life extension action I can take. And I am sure this is true for many others.
Consulting with my heart doctor was not fruitful. He prescribed the cookbook set of meds: 10 mg of Lipitor, 40mg of Avorstatin, 61 mg aspirin, 75 mg Plavix (clopidogrel).
I got some good advise from folks on another forum herein. Found Avorstatin helps LDL/HDL but does nothing for plaque or inflammation. I’m now taking 40mg of Crestor, in place of the Avorstatin.
See Birmingham Medical News, New Plaque Study highlights Power of Crestor.
Very good!
Other: I’m looking to change Lipitor blood pressure med to Ramipril. This product seems to lower inflammation levels in the blood, whereas Lipitor does not.
Questions for discussion:
What else can we do to reduce plaque?
Is there something we are doing in our healthy protocols which causes more plaque buildup?
Cellular Inflammation in the Blood: how is this really measured? How do we reduce naturally? Do any of our senolytic treatments knock this down?
All: please pass along any good research things you have seen.
This is a great group!
Thank you!
BobM
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Peter, LDL-C is worthless, absolutely worthless as a marker for heart disease. You need LDL-P tested. If LDL-P is normal/low, you are "safe" regardless of what your LDL-C is. If your LDL-C is low (aka good) and your LDL-P is high you are a walking time bomb.
The VAP test was worthless too that's why it was withdrawn from the market several years ago. I see it is back. The reason it was originally withdrawn (my conjecture) is that they were using some algorithm to Compute the various forms of cholesterol. They never showed data that proved their algorithm was accurate. Yeah, they claim they stopped the test because of investor support but I don't buy that flimsy story.
As far as LEF and MK7 you are getting a small fraction of what studies show you need to remove plaque from your arteries, which is close to 400 mcg/day. And remember LEF was selling a watered down version for years of MK7 that was a racemic mixture.. and claiming it was all Trans.
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Randy:, will stay with my approach. It worked for 26 years. Your LDL-P is better (is part of VAP test) if starting from scratch. I do not know details about MK 7, but fish oil is my preferred approach to block inflammation and prevent plaque and is backed up with several thousand peer reviewed studies. Check out the books by Sears and others. Fish oil also has multiple other health benefits in numerous other systems.
On the EDTA Suggestion by Olsson, it also has merit and has risk assessment in Forever Healthy. It has been around for many years.
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This is a brief followup to the many excellent replies on this topic. First, a big that you to all!
I consider my root cause problem to be plaque buildup. Not too much of an inflammation issue.
I have been on a strict low carb and high veg diet for many many years. And heart healthy eating.Diet including large daily doses of LIfeExt Olive oil (exceptional), 3000 mg of high quality fish oils, LIfeExt Vit K2 SuperK Elite), 300mg pycnogenol, 1000 mg metformin ER and AMPK activator, curcumin elite, immune senescence, and the monthly large doses of fisetin, weekly senolytic activator, weekly rapamycin, 2x/year dasatinib. More...
Labs: 2x/year. Last result in part (before stints and new changes):
glucose 94
total cholesterol: 138
Triglycerides: 69
HDL Cholesterol: 52
LDL Cholesterol: 72
T.Chol/HDL Ratio: 2.7 (much less than 1/2 the average risk)
Estimated CHD Risk: <0.5
C-Reactive Protein, cardiac: 0.81 (risk for future cardiac event is LOW if under 1.)
white Blood count: 3.1 (low)
DHEA: 233
Hemoglobin A1c: 5.1 (I used to be 6.1, controlled it with diet and exercise, then added metformin, more for life extension benefits.
Note: my statin Med change from 10 mg to 20 mg dose helped those cholesterol/trigl values. But did not do much for plaque.
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I've read quite a number of studies now and I don't see any relationship between LDL-c and survival. I fact higher LDL and Tot Cholesterol is better for survival when you are over 65.
Ratio of Tot C to HDL and Trig to HDL are better preditors.
And if you think your statin is doing you good, why not get CAC and CIMT to confirm improvements?