Heart Disease
Recommended Treatment Protocol to reverse blocked arteries, lower blood pressure and support the heart muscle.
Note: We Recommend purchasing the below nutrients at around 40% off retail from
www.iHerb.com They also have low cost and fast 3 day international delivery.
Linus Pauling Therapy - to reverse blocked arteries and lower blood pressure.
To be taken twice a day after food
• 3 to 5 grams (as tolerated) of L-Lysine (buy Now L-Lysine 500mg capsules)
• 1.5 to 2.5 grams (as tolerated) of L-Proline (buy Now 500mg capsules)
• 2 to 4 grams (as tolerated) of Magnesium Ascorbate (Water Soluble Vitamin C)
• 1.5 grams of Ascorbyl Palmitate (Fat Soluble Vitamin C)
• 2 to 3 grams (as tolerated) of Liposomal Vitamin C (Maximum Absorption Vitamin C)
Weekly EDTA Chelation Treatments to move calcium deposits in arteries.
EDTA is received intravenously and must be administered by a Registered Medical Practitioner.
We recommend the NZ clinic with over 30 years experience in this type of therapy.
Centre for Adanced Medicine (CAM)
110 Remuera Road,
Remuera, Auckland.
Ph: (09)524-7743
Lower Blood Pressure by relaxing arteries with nitric oxide production.
To be taken twice a day after food
• 2 grams of slow release L-Arginine (Thorne Perfusia-SR is best)
• 100mg of Pycnogenol (Healthy Origins is best buy)
• 300mg of Resveratrol (Healthy Origins is best buy)
Support your Heart Muscle and lower blood pressure.
To be taken twice a day after food
• 200mg of CoQ10 Ubiquinol (Healthy Origins is best buy)
• 1 gram of L-Carnitine (buy Doctors Best L-Carnitine Fumarate 855mg yielding
500mg of L-Carnitine)
Mercury Toxicity causes Hypertension, Cardiovascular Disease, & Stroke
Mercury toxicity should be evaluated in any patient with hypertension, coronary heart disease, cerebral vascular disease, cerebrovascular accident, or other vascular disease. Specific testing for acute and chronic toxicity and total body burden using hair, toenail, urine, and serum should be performed. Measure your toxic Mercury levels hereHouston MC. Vanderbilt University School of Medicine, Saint Thomas Hospital, Nashville, TN, USA.
Role of mercury toxicity in hypertension, cardiovascular disease, and stroke.
J Clin Hypertens (Greenwich). 2011 Aug;13(8):621-7. doi: 10.1111/j.1751-7176.2011.00489.x. Epub 2011 Jul 11.
Link to Abstract
Fluoride levels higher in patients with Cardiovascular Disease
There was significant correlation between history of cardiovascular events and presence of fluoride uptake in coronary arteries. The coronary fluoride uptake value in patients with cardiovascular events was significantly higher than in patients without cardiovascular events.NOTE: Iodine supplementation markedly increases urinary excretion of fluoride
Li Y, Berenji GR, Shaba WF, Tafti B, Yevdayev E, Dadparvar S.
VA Greater Los Angeles Healthcare System, Los Angeles, California 90073, USA.
Association of vascular fluoride uptake with vascular calcification and coronary artery disease.
Nucl Med Commun. 2012 Jan;33(1):14-20.
Link to Abstract
High Cholesterol reduces risk of death
Dr Hisako Tsuki of Kansai Medical University in Japan, presented data in a recent edition (27th June 2011) of the Archives of Internal Medicine, for risk of stroke at different levels of cholesterol in more than 16,500 people followed for about a decade.The results showed that the higher someone's cholesterol was, the lower their risk of death due to cardiovascular disease. In those with the highest cholesterol, risk of death was 58 per cent lower than those in the lowest cholesterol band.
Tsuji H. Low serum cholesterol level and increased ischemic stroke mortality.
Archives of Internal Medicine. 2011;171(12):1121-1123 Link to Document
What really causes heart disease then?
Read up on the science behind the real cause of heart disease by Dr Jeffrey Dach MDGo To the web page of Dr Jeffrey Dach MD
Read up on the science by another physician, Dr Michael Lam MD
Go To the web page of Dr Michael Lam MD
Download the document "One Pharmacists View of Coronary Heart Disease"
By Mike Ciell, R.Ph Download PDF Document
Reducing Animal Fat (or any fat) in the diet, proven not to effect risk of heart disease, stroke or death.
Norwich Medical School at the University of East Anglia, recently published (6th July 2011), a huge analysis of 48 studies, from 1965 to 2009, on the effects of reducing or modifying dietary fat, for preventing cardiovascular disease. (Modifying dietary fat means replacing saturated (animal) fats with plant oils and unsaturated spreads)They found that of 71,795 participants of who 4,292 died, that reducing or modifying dietary fat had no effect on mortality.
They found that of 65,978 participants of who 1,407 died of a cardiovascular event, that reducing or modifying dietary fat had no effect on cardiovascular mortality.
Now here is the tricky bit, because the authors then claimed that they had found proof of a reduction of non-fatal cardiovascular events, due to the reduction or modification of dietary fat. However they failed to summarise, that they also included studies with other interventions, like giving nutritional supplements to the treated group. When these studies are removed and only studies where reduction or modification of dietary fat is included, we find that there was no reduction in cardiovascular events due to the reduction or modification of dietary fat.
In summary we can say that current medical advice to reduce animal fat (or any fat) in the diet is no longer valid and has proven to have no effect on the risk of stroke, heart attack or death.
Hooper L, et al. Reduced or modified dietary fat for preventing cardiovascular disease.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2011 Jul 6;7:CD002137. Link to Abstract Link to Full Document