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		HEART HEALTH 
		
		Heart  Disease: Cholesterol  Not the Bad Guy
		
		
		
		 
		 
              CBN.com  
                One of the best ways to live a longer and  better life is to reduce your likelihood of dying from heart disease. If we  could eliminate heart disease tomorrow, the average life expectancy of every  American would increase by an estimated ten years. Although mortality from  heart disease has decreased due to medical advances, the incidence of heart  disease is on the rise.  
              More of us are getting heart disease  because we aren’t doing enough to address the underlying cause: inflammation in  the arteries. Like all silent inflammation, this arterial inflammation results  from an increased production of “bad” eicosanoids. Rather than pinning your  hopes on some new surgery or drug that may or may not be developed in the  future, why not just avoid getting heart disease in the first place?  
              We are led to believe that elevated  cholesterol is the cause of heart disease. As a result, we have declared war on  dietary cholesterol, and that has also meant a war on dietary fat. The result  of that dietary approach has been an epidemic of obesity. That is why the focus  of the medical community has shifted to reducing blood cholesterol levels to  the lowest levels possible. Not surprisingly, the most profitable drugs  (statins) known to the pharmaceutical industry are the primary weapons in this  continuing war. But what if cholesterol was only a minor, secondary player in  heart disease? 
              Protecting yourself against heart disease  requires far more than just simply lowering your cholesterol levels. In fact, 50 percent of the people who are  hospitalized with heart attacks have normal cholesterol levels. What’s more, 25  percent of people who develop premature heart attacks have no traditional risk  factors at all. So if elevated cholesterol isn’t the primary cause of heart  disease, what is?  
              Silent  Inflammation Equals Bad Heart 
                              A heart attack is simply the death of the  muscle cells in the heart due to a lack of oxygen caused by a constriction in  blood flow. If this lack of oxygen is prolonged, enough heart muscle cells die,  and your heart attack becomes a fatal one.  
              There are several things that can cause  the stoppage of oxygen flow to the heart. A rupture could occur in a piece of  unstable plaque lining the artery wall. This causes the activation of  platelets, which clump together and block blood flow. You could have a spasm in  the artery that blocks blood flow to the heart. More often, it may be due to an  electrical flutter, which disrupts the synchronized beating and causes the  heart to stop functioning altogether. None of these heart attack causes has  much to do with increased cholesterol levels, but they have everything to do  with silent inflammation. 
              You may be asking yourself, “What  on earth is silent inflammation?” Even more perplexing, how can inflammation be  silent? Silent inflammation is simply inflammation that falls below the  threshold of perceived pain. That’s what makes it so dangerous. You don’t take  any steps to stop it as it smolders for years, if not decades, eventually  erupting into what we call chronic disease.  
              Eicosanoids and Heart Disease 
              Eicosanoids were the first hormones  developed by living organisms and are produced by every cell in your body. They  control everything from your immune system to your brain to your heart. There  are two kinds of eicosanoids, those that promote inflammation  (pro-inflammatory) and tissue destruction, and those that stop inflammation (anti-inflammatory)  and promote healing. You need to have both kinds in the proper balance in order  to be in a state of wellness. Unfortunately, most of us produce too many  pro-inflammatory eicosanoids, which leads to increasing levels of silent  inflammation and eventually to chronic disease. The Zone Diet was developed  primarily to put these hormones back in proper balance.  
              A variety of factors forge the linkage  between silent inflammation and fatal heart attacks. First of all,  pro-inflammatory eicosanoids inside an unstable plaque can trigger the  inflammation that increases the likelihood of rupture. Often these unstable  plaques are so small that they can’t be detected by conventional technology  like an angiogram. When such a plaque bursts, cellular debris is released and  platelets rush to the site in an attempt to repair the rupture, just as it  would a wound. New blood clots formed from aggregated platelets may plug up the  artery, stopping blood flow completely. This helps explain why many people do  not die of heart attacks even though they have highly clogged arteries, whereas  others do, even though they have seemingly normal arteries. It all depends on  the levels of inflammation in these small, unstable plaques.  
              These same pro-inflammatory eicosanoids are  also the culprits behind vasospasm, the second cause of fatal heart attacks.  Pro-inflammatory eicosanoids act as powerful constrictors of your arteries and  can lead to a vasospasm, a potentially fatal cramp or “charley horse” that  prevents blood flow to the heart.  
              As if all this wasn’t enough, lack of  sufficient levels of long-chain omega-3 fatty acids (found in fish oil) in the  heart muscle can also lead to a fatal heart attack caused by chaotic electric  rhythms in the heart. This condition, called sudden death, accounts for more  than 50 percent of all fatal heart attacks.  
              The  Cholesterol Myth  
              I am not saying that  cholesterol has no role in heart disease, only that it is a secondary factor  that plays a far lesser role in fatal heart attacks than silent inflammation.  If your goal is to reduce the chances for a fatal heart attack, then it’s far  more important to decrease silent inflammation than to decrease cholesterol. So  how did the importance of inflammation get lost, and how did hype over cholesterol  get started? To answer that question, you have to go back nearly 150 years. 
              One of the greatest  physicians in the nineteenth century was Rudolf Virchow. Nearly 150 years ago,  he stated that atherosclerosis is an inflammatory disease based on his observations  of autopsies of the very rare number of people who had actually died of a heart  attack. At the turn of the twentieth century, the greatest physician in America  was Sir William Osler. When asked why he didn’t include a chapter on heart  disease in the classic textbook of medicine, he replied the disease is so rare  that most physicians would never see it. However, all this began to change. 
              In 1913, studies by a  Russian scientist demonstrated that feeding a large amount of cholesterol to  rabbits induced atherosclerotic lesions. As a result of this experiment,  physicians began to believe that dietary cholesterol might be the primary cause  of heart disease. Unfortunately, further studies found that dietary cholesterol  induced atherosclerosis in rabbits because it depressed thyroid function. If  thyroid extracts were given at the same time as the dietary cholesterol, then  there was no damage to the arteries. What’s more, studies in primates suggested  that a high-cholesterol diet only led to accelerated lesions on the arteries if  the arteries were significantly inflamed in the first place. Although these  findings should have put a damper on the primacy of the cholesterol connection  causing heart disease, this was not the case.  
               The High-Serum Cholesterol Myth 
              Physicians used to  think that we only had to worry about our total cholesterol levels. Then  research found that this wasn’t such a strong predictor of heart disease. The  fact that the most important drug (aspirin) to prevent heart attacks had no  effect on reducing cholesterol (but it does a great job of reducing  inflammation) was not going to get in the way of the great story on the  benefits of lowering serum cholesterol levels as much as possible. Today  lowering cholesterol is the number-one priority of every cardiologist in America. 
              I challenge the Holy Grail of cardiology  that high serum cholesterol is the cause of cardiovascular mortality for one  reason only: the data.  Various  epidemiological studies have found that increased serum cholesterol levels  occurred more often in heart disease patients. But that increase was five to 10  percent higher in those who developed heart disease than those who didn’t. To  show how small this difference is, 38 percent of the heart disease-free  patients in the Framingham  study had a total cholesterol level of 220 mg/dl or less, whereas 32 percent of  patients with heart disease had a total cholesterol level of 220 mg/dl or less.  Further analysis of the same data indicated that high total cholesterol levels  after age 47 appeared to have no impact on cardiovascular death. The MONICA  study in Europe confirmed this lack of linkage  between high cholesterol and death from heart attacks. In France, subjects with cholesterol levels of  around 240 mg/dl had only one-fifth the number of fatal heart attacks as  subjects in Finland  who had the same cholesterol levels. This is called the French Paradox. Really,  though, it’s only a paradox if you choose to believe that total serum  cholesterol is the primary cause of death from heart disease. 
                              Summary 
              I’m confident that Ultra Refined  high-dose fish oil*, especially when coupled with improved insulin control, will  have a significant role to play in the treatment of heart disease. By  controlling your level of silent inflammation, you can reduce your risk of  dying of heart disease to being as rare as it was at the beginning of the  twentieth century.  
              To learn more about silent inflammation and  heart disease read The Anti –  Inflammation Zone by Dr. Barry Sears, published by Harper Collins.  
               
              *These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and 
                Drug Administration. This product is not intended to diagnose, 
                treat, cure, or prevent any disease. As with any natural product, 
              individual results will vary.   
              For more information about Dr. Barry Sears, his incredible fish 
              oil supplements, or the popular Zone Diet, please visit www.zoneliving.com. 
              If you purchase any Zone Labs, Inc. products, part of the 
                proceeds support CBN ministries.  
              Dr. Barry Sears is a leader in the field of 
                dietary control of hormonal response. A former research scientist 
                at the Boston University School of Medicine and the Massachusetts 
                Institute of Technology, Dr. Sears has dedicated his efforts over 
                the past 25 years to the study of lipids and their inflammatory 
                role in the development of chronic disease. He holds 13 U.S. patents 
                in the areas of intravenous drug delivery systems and hormonal 
                regulation for the treatment of cardiovascular disease.  
              
		  
 
 
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