A widespread link between
heart disease, arthritis, and cancer now seems
treatable
by Douglas Mulhall
Adapted from THE CALCIUM BOMB: The Nanobacteria Link to Heart
Disease and Cancer, by Douglas Mulhall & Katja Hansen (The
Writers’ Collective) www.calcify.com
What medical condition affects more of us than heart
disease, arthritis, or cancer, and why is it suddenly such a
compelling issue?
According to thousands of medical journal articles,
Calcification — also known as calcium deposits, hardening of
the arteries, cysts, stones, and hard plaque — happens in all
those illnesses and more.
And it just struck home for millions.
Throngs of baby boomers are rushing to get checked for
calcification since rock icon David Bowie and former President
Clinton had emergency operations for it. David Letterman, Larry
King, CBS’s René Syler, actress Koo Stark, and many pro
athletes have it too.
Calcification is the hardening of our body tissue by calcium
salts. These salts contain other minerals, such as phosphorus,
and are often harmful. They are dangerous because they provoke
chronic and painful swelling, gumming up arteries and organs,
with crippling or fatal results.
Calcification can sometimes be a disease on its own, but is
more frequently found in other illnesses. Calcium deposits are
in breast and ovarian cancer. Breast implant patients
occasionally require surgery to remove calcium deposits that
develop around the implant. The deposits show up as spots on
mammograms and can be mistaken for cancer.
Calcification is often in arthritis, heart disease, and
diabetes. Many arthritis sufferers who have calcium deposits go
on to develop heart disease, but until recently the link has
never been understood. Nor has the one between
osteoporosis—loss of bone calcium—and the seemingly contrary
growth of calcium deposits elsewhere as the illness
progresses.
Although calcification occurs more frequently as we age, being
young is no defense: it is often in sport injuries, and
sidelines many athletes. Bursitis and tendonitis can contain
calcium deposits. Kidney stones are usually calcified at the
center.
More than half a trillion dollars are spent annually to treat
calcification-related diseases. So why haven’t more stories
explained it until now? Because until now, no one knew where it
came from or how to get rid of it.
For example, look for the term “calcification” at the National
Library of Medicine’s PubMed website and you’ll find about
23,000 articles about the condition, but few if any claim
positive scientific evidence of a cause.
One of the barriers to finding a cause or treatment for
calcification is that some experts have long claimed it is part
of the body’s healing process. Because of this widespread idea,
doctors have often not considered calcification to be at the
root of the problem. They also often don’t associate
calcification with the trademark inflammation that accompanies
it.
Yet up-to-date medical manuals such as the authoritative Merck
Manual of Diagnosis — a bible found in many doctors’ offices —
describe calcium phosphate crystals that make up calcification
as “aggressive” and provoking chronic inflammation as well as
attacking joints.
Now, the discovery of a tiny particle has shown a link between
calcification and inflammation. Scientists who now work with
the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA)
discovered something so small that it challenges the definition
of life. It made headlines when Mayo Clinic researchers found
it in heart disease, while others discovered how to test for
and treat it.
Basically, the scientists found that the particle generates a
calcium phosphate shell while in the blood, and attacks human
tissue. This provokes an immune reaction that includes chronic
inflammation.
And in October, the Journal Pathophysiology published clinical
trial results suggesting that when the particle is targeted
with treatment, calcification seems to be reversible. [Study
title: Maniscalco et al, "Calcification in Coronary Artery
Disease can be Reversed by Long-Term EDTA-tetracycline
chemotherapy," Pathophysiology 11 (2004) 95–101.]
The study also demonstrated reversal of most of the clinical
symptoms of atherosclerosis, including coronary artery
calcification, in a majority of patients who participated in
the trial.
The authors of the study emphasize that the results are just
preliminary, but nonetheless the treatment that they used is
available now as a combination of an over-the-counter
nutraceutical and a prescription of generic antibiotics.
The problem with the tiny discovered particle that seems to be
generating calcification is that no one knows exactly what it
is. Its DNA remains a mystery because much of can’t be isolated
using standard tests. So right now, scientists from NASA and a
dozen or so international institutes are using nanotechnology
methods to try and decipher its secrets.
Look for the next installment to see what they have found, and
how it affects treatment.
About the Author
Douglas Mulhall, nanotechnology journalist, is co-author
with biological engineer Katja Hansen of THE CALCIUM BOMB: The
Nanobacteria Link to Heart Disease & Cancer (The Writers’
Collective) that explores new discoveries about calcification.
Afterword by leading cardiologist Dr. Benedict Maniscalco. See
http://www.calcify.com
Mulhall also authored the acclaimed book, OUR MOLECULAR
FUTURE.
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