Treatment of Heart Disease with Coenzyme
Q10 by Greg Post
Since its discovery in the late 1950’s Coenzyme Q10 (CoQ10) has
received much attention as a necessary compound for proper
cellular function. It is the essential coenzyme necessary for
the production of ATP (adenosine triphosphate) upon which all
cellular functions depend. Without ATP
our
bodies cannot function properly. Without CoQ10, ATP cannot
function. This connection has made CoQ10 a very important
object of study in relation to chronic disease. In many cases
the presence of chronic disease is associated with inadequate
levels of CoQ10. But no area of study has received more
attention than the relation between CoQ10 and heart disease.
That is because CoQ10 is believed to be of fundamental
importance in cells with high metabolic demands such as cardiac
cells. A further reason the connection of heart disease and
CoQ10 has gained so much attention is because heart conditions
of many kinds are associated with chronically low CoQ10
levels.
CoQ10 is highly concentrated in heart muscle cells because of
their high energy requirements. Add this to the fact that heart
disease is the number one killer in developed and developing
countries and one can see why the bulk of scientific research
on CoQ10 has been concerned with heart disease. Specifically,
studies on congestive heart failure have demonstrated a strong
correlation between the severity of heart failure and the
degree of CoQ10 deficiency. The lower the levels of CoQ10 in
the heart muscles the more severe the heart failure. If indeed
CoQ10 deficiency is a primary cause of congestive heart failure
then, in such cases, the remedy is simple and cost effective;
CoQ10 supplementation.
Congestive heart failure is a condition where the heart does
not pump effectively resulting in an accumulation of fluid in
the lungs. Symptoms may include shortness of breath, difficulty
breathing when lying flat and leg or ankle swelling. Causes
include chronic hypertension, cardiomyopathy (primary heart
disease) and myocardial infarction (irreversible injury to
heart muscles). Heart muscle strength is measure by the
ejection fraction which is a measure of the fraction of blood
pumped out of the heart with each beat. A low ejection fraction
indicates a weak heart.
Several trials have been conducted involving patients with
enlarged weak heart muscles of unknown causes. For those of you
who like difficult phrases this condition (or variety of
conditions) is known as idiopathic dilated cardiomyopathy. In
these trials CoQ10 supplementation was compared to placebo
effects. Standard treatments for heart failure were not
discontinued. The results were measured by echocardiography (a
diagnostic test which uses ultrasound waves to make images of
the heart chambers, valves and surrounding structures). The
overall results of CoQ10 supplementation demonstrated a steady
and continued improvement in heart function as well as steady
and continued reduction in patient symptoms including fatigue,
chest pains, palpitations and breathing difficulty. Patients
with more establish and long-term cases showed gradual
improvement but did not gain normal heart function. Patients
with newer cases of heart failure demonstrated much more rapid
improvement often returning to normal heart function.
Papers numbering in the hundreds from eight different symposia
have been written and presented on the effects of CoQ10 on
heart disease. International clinical studies have also been
conducted in the United States, Japan, Germany, Italy and
Sweden. Together these studies and the papers that have been
derived from them demonstrate significant improvement in heart
muscle function while causing no adverse effects.
One particular area of study involves diastolic dysfunction
which is one of the earliest signs of myocardial failure.
Diastole is the phase of the cardiac cycle when the heart is
filled with returning blood. Because this phase requires more
cellular energy than the systolic phase (when the blood is
pushed out of the heart) it is more dependent on CoQ10.
Diastolic dysfunction is a stiffening of the heart muscle which
naturally restricts the heart’s ability to pump. This condition
is associated with many cardiac disorders. Hypertension is
among these disorders. As the heart muscles become stiff there
is often a corresponding rise in blood pressure. When the
diastolic dysfunction is reversed, blood pressure tends to
lower as well. In one study involving 109 patients with
hypertension, CoQ10 supplementation was added to normal
hypertension treatments. In an average of 4.4 months 51% of the
patients were able stop using at least one blood pressure
lowering medication. Some were able to stop using up to three
medications. Another study produced similar results. In that
study 43% of 424 patients were able to stop using between one
and three cardiovascular drugs because of CoQ10
supplementation.
These examples are just a drop in the bucket. Diastolic
dysfunction (and by proxy, hypertension) includes only a small
sampling of heart conditions that respond favorably to CoQ10
supplementation. Other areas of research show great promise for
CoQ10 treatments. Among these are cancer and AIDS. But such
conditions are beyond the scope of this essay. CoQ10 is
essential to the proper functioning of all cell types. It is
not surprising, therefore, to find a diverse number of diseases
that respond favorably to CoQ10 supplementation. Since all
metabolically active tissues are highly sensitive to CoQ10
deficiency, we can expect to see CoQ10 research expand to many
other areas of chronic diseases.
http://www.optimal-heart-health.com/coq10.html
About the Author
Greg has degrees in science, divinity and philosophy and is
currently an I.T. developer.
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