- Vitamin C, Lysine, Proline + Some Antioxidants
To normalize your cholesterol and/or high blood pressure, while gently healing your arteries and removing plaque:
RECOMMENDED ADULT DAILY DOSES OF VITAMIN C, LYSINE AND PROLINE
| |||
Seriousness of Condition
|
Vitamin C
|
Lysine
|
Proline
|
Prophylactic/Prevention
|
3 g
|
3 g
|
0.5 g
|
High risk Therapeutic
(mother /father /sister /brother hashad a heart attack or stroke)
|
6 g
|
6 g
|
1.0 g
|
Serious Therapeutic
(for someone who has had a heart attack or stroke)
|
9 g
|
9 g
|
1.5 g
|
For information onAntioxidants and other useful supplements to aid the reversal of atherosclerosis and maintain health:
For instructions on preparing and taking the Rath/Pauling Therapy ingredients:
Effects of the Rath/Pauling Therapy in CVD
Addresses the root cause of atherosclerosis in CVD by strengthening and healing blood vessels
– Amino acids proline and lysine are basic building blocks of collagen - additionally, lysine promotes pituitary gland secretion of hGH (human growth hormone), the master hormone that will indirectly promote fibroblasts to produce more collagen throughout the body.
Vitamin C is involved in collagen production;
– Inhibits the binding of Lp(a) molecules to the blood vessel walls – thus removing plaque build-ups.
– Sufficient lysine and proline work to unbind Lp(a) from the arterial wall - by blocking the collagen-digesting enzyme anchor sites in the connective tissue.
Lowers Lp(a) blood levels over time and keeps them low
Therapy mechanism doesn't depend on the cause of plaque formation
It doesn't matterif the arterial lesions were caused by mechanical stress, a vitamin deficiency, oxidized cholesterol, elevated homocysteine or sugars, fat in the diet, or even . . .
Little green men!
Rath/Pauling Patents
According to the Rath/Pauling 1994 U.S. patent, a binding inhibitor (E.g. lysine or lysine analogs) together with vitamin C can stop and even reverse plaque formations - the amino acid lysine (lysine analogs), along with vitamin C and other antioxidants (E.g. Co-Q10, vitamin E and vitamin A) in sufficient concentration, can inhibit Lp(a) from binding to exposed lysine residues.
US Patent No. 5,278,189, Pauling/Rath (1994).Prevention and treatment of occlusive cardiovascular disease with ascorbate and substances that inhibit the binding of lipoprotein (A)
Another patent concerns stripping plaque from transplant organs(actually filed first) -in later experiments Pauling and Rath showed that proline residues are also exposed by lesions in blood vessels; they filed a U.S. patent for using proline as well as lysine, vitamin C, other amino acids and antioxidants (in oral amounts well past what is needed for prevention) to inhibit Lp(a) binding and so “melt away”atherosclerotic plaques in human organs dipped in these solvents during organ transplants
US Patent No. 5230996: Pauling/Rath (1993). A Procedure for the Cleansing/Removal of Atherosclerotic Plaque from Human Organs During Transplant Surgery.
Reported successes
Orthomolecular physicians have reported much success in treating heart disease with synergistic combinations of ascorbate, lysine and proline
Here's just a couple of testimonies:
– Linus Pauling Case History: a National Science Medalist who had undergone several coronary artery bypass grafts (CABGs), each of which had re-clogged, and who had been prescribed statin drugs for high cholesterol as well as calcium channel blockers and beta-blockers for high blood pressure. After discussing his history with Pauling, this patient began a supplement program, including 6g of vitamin C; however, his condition continued to worsen. Pauling then suggested adding L-lysine (peaking at 6g/day) to his cocktail. The patient described the results as bordering on miraculous: his walking distance suddenly recovered, and he was again able to do his own yard work (including the cutting up of a tree with his chainsaw and the painting of his house).
– Dr. Kathie Dalessandri, MD: reported her own dramatic improvement in the Archives of Internal Medicine after using vitamin C and lysine. “I am a 53-year-old woman with a significantly elevated level of Lp(a) (27 mg/dL). . . I began to follow the advice of Linus Pauling. For individuals who have an Lp(a) level higher than 25 mg/dL and a family history of heart disease, the recommendation is to take 3 g/d of both ascorbic acid and L-lysine monohydrochloride.After 6 months of this regimen, with no adverse effects, my Lp(a) level decreased to 14 mg/dL, a reduction of 48%.”
1950's - Canadian physician, Dr. G. C. Willis demonstrated that an ascorbate deficiency increased cholesterol synthesis in animals
Increased dietary cholesterol reduced vitamin C levels - and, conversely, vitamin C supplementation decreased cholesterol levels.
Willis found that Vitamin C reversed atherosclerosis in guinea pigs -like humans, they do not produce their own ascorbate
Willis GC. 1953. An Experimental Study of the Intimal Hemorrhages and in the Precipitation of Coronary Thrombi. Canadian Medical Association Journal, vol.69:pp.17-22.
Willis et al GC. 1954. Serial Arteriography in Atherosclerosis. Canadian Medical Association Journal, vol.71: pp.562-568.
Willis GC, Fishman S. 1955. Ascorbic Acid Content of Human Arterial Tissue. Canadian Medical Association Journal, vol.72:pp.500-503.
Willis GC. 1957. The Influence of Ascorbic Acid upon the Liver. Canadian Medical Association Journal, vol.76:pp.1044-1048.
Willis GC. 1957. The Reversibility of Atherosclerosis. Canadian Medical Association Journal of Nutrition, vol.77:pp.106-109.
1971 - British physician, Dr. Constance Spittle, demonstrated that vitamin C therapy could lower or raise cholesterol depending on CVD presence
– Patients exhibited a transitory rise in blood cholesterol when given vitamin C therapy –explained by cholesterol released from plaques as vitamin Chealed the blood vessel walls;
– Patients with no CVD showed lower blood cholesterol levels.
Spittle CR. 1971. Atherosclerosis and Vitamin C, The Lancet, Dec 11;(18):pp.1280-1.
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