|
Coronary
Calcification Predicts Future Heart Attacks and Coronary Death.
Cholesterol Not Found to be a Significant Risk Factor
by
Bill Sardi
by Bill Sardi
DIGG THIS
A striking
report just published in the New England Journal of Medicine
indicates the accumulation of calcium in coronary arteries, and
not cholesterol, more accurately predicts a future heart attack
or other heart trouble, far more than cholesterol or other standard
risk factors.
This report
gives evidence of a major misdirection by modern medicine the
creation of cholesterol phobia in the population at large. Prior
studies show use of cholesterol-lowering drugs does not reduce mortality
rates for coronary artery disease. This report follows a front-page
report in Business Week magazine declaring cholesterol-lowering
drugs to be of marginal value.
The study involved
6722 men and women, ~age 60, who were studied for a period of 3.8
years (median). None had coronary artery disease at the beginning
of the study. Subjects who experienced an adverse coronary event
(heart attack, angina, placement of a stent, coronary death) were
more likely to be taking cholesterol-lowering drugs (~28%) than
those who did not experience such an event (~16%). Furthermore,
subjects who experienced a heart attack or angina had about the
same total cholesterol (~199) as subjects who did not (~194). Cholesterol
barely met statistical significance whereas calcium was a highly
predictive factor.
Traditionally-used
risk factors, such as C-reactive protein (a marker of inflammation),
triglycerides, HDL cholesterol and greater body mass, were not predictive
for a future coronary artery event.
Among subjects
whose coronary artery calcium score was zero, their risk for any
adverse coronary event was only about one-half of 1% (0.0044), or
less than 1 in 200, whereas those with a coronary calcium score
over 300, about 8.0% experienced an adverse event involving coronary
arteries (0.0804), or about 8 in 100, an 18-fold difference (1800%!),
over the 3.8-year period.
This study
shows the risk for a future heart attack is nil for those with a
calcium arterial score of zero. This data helps to explain why hundreds
of thousands of Americans experience a sudden-death heart attack
with low-to-normal cholesterol. Most heart attacks emanate in the
four coronary arteries that supply the heart with oxygenated blood.
About 50% of arterial plaque is calcium and only 3% is cholesterol.
Arterial calcium
can be measured by use of a CT scan (called an Agatston score, for
Dr. Arthur Agatston, South Beach Miami, Florida cardiologist). About
70% of white males, 52% of black males, 57% of Hispanic males and
59% of Chinese males, have coronary calcium scores greater than
zero. The calcium arterial scores for women are about half that
of males owing to the fact they donate calcium to their offspring
during pregnancy and lactation and control calcium via estrogen
throughout their fertile years.
Calcium begins
to accumulate in coronary arteries in males as soon as full growth
is achieved, around age 18. Women begin to accumulate calcium in
their arteries with the onset of menopause or early hysterectomy.
It was recently reported that postmenopausal women who take calcium
supplements increase their risk for a heart attack by about 45%.
[British Medical Journal 2008 Feb 2; 336 (7638): 2626]

In the early
1990s British cardiologist Stephen Seely noted that countries which
consume that highest amount of calcium (New Zealand, Ireland, North
America, Scandinavian countries), mostly from dairy products, have
the highest rates of cardiovascular disease. [International Journal
Cardiology 1991 Nov; 33(2):1918]
Sixty-four
percent (64%) of subjects who experienced any coronary event were
current or former smokers compared to about 50% of those who did
not experience a heart attack or other adverse event. [Coronary
Calcium as a Predictor of Coronary Events in Four Racial or Ethnic
Groups, New England Journal of Medicine 358: 133645, March
27, 2008]
March
28, 2008
Bill
Sardi [send
him mail] is
author of the new book: You
Dont Have To Be Afraid Of Cancer Anymore.
Copyright
© 2008 Bill Sardi Word of Knowledge Agency, San Dimas, California.
Not intended for commercial use or posting on other websites. Permission
to reprint should be obtained from
the author.
Bill
Sardi Archives
|