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Well Harry,

Sure looks like one should be blamed careful with what one consumes.

I wonder if Actos is different than Glucophage.

What about your large doses of Niacin? Did you also increase your intake

of Folic Acid?

You know, before I am done I will either be well informed or Looney.

If it is Looney then I will be sure to take my Folic Acid, B6 and B12.

Let's see, oh yes, I do need Niacin to raise something and lower

something else. Wonder if a good shot of Dewar's White Label would

suffice?

Cy, Crystal & Grady...

homocysteine

HOMOCYSTEINE CAUSES CLOTS

Gabe Mirkin, M.D.

A study from France shows that people who get clots in the heart, lungs,

brain or muscles should get blood tests for homocysteine and Lp(a).

After a person suffers from a heart attack, stroke, or lung or muscle

clot,

doctors routinely look for obesity, cancer, family history of clotting,

birth

control pills, high cholesterol and factor V Leiden disease. They should

also check blood levels of homocysteine and Lp(a). Lack of any one of

three

vitamins

causes the clot-forming homocysteine to accumulate in your bloodstream.

You

can lower blood levels of homocysteine to normal by taking folic acid,

vitamin

B12 and pyridoxine. If you have a genetic disorder, Lp(a), that causes

clots, you can lower Lp(a) to normal by taking another vitamin called

niacin. So,

people who suffer clots need blood tests for homocysteine and Lp(a), two

conditions that can be cured by taking vitamins.

Red blood cell methylfolate and plasma homocysteine as risk factors for

venous thromboembolism: a matched case-control study. Lancet, 2002, Vol

359,

Iss

9308, pp 747-752. I Quere, TV Perneger, J Zittoun, H Bellet, JC Gris, JP

Daures, JF Schved, E Mercier, JP Laroche, M Dauzat, H Bounameaux, C

Janbon,

P

deMoerloose.

HOMOCYSTEINE AND LOSS OF MENTAL FUNCTION

Gabe Mirkin, M.D.

A study from the University of California at shows that people

with

high blood levels of homocysteine are at high risk for loss of mental

function

and even Alzheimer's disease.

Your body requires 20 protein building blocks called amino acids, but

only

nine are essential (meaning that you must get them from your food); your

body

can make the rest from the essential nine. It can use the amino acid,

methionine, to make another amino acid, cysteine. But if you lack any

one of

the

three vitamins: B12, folic acid, or pyridoxine, your body converts

methionine to a poison called homocysteine that plugs up arteries to

cause

heart attacks

and strokes. Anything that damages arteries can also cause loss of

mental

function. So people with high blood level of homocysteine are at high

risk

for

heart attacks, strokes, and dementia or Alzheimer's disease. You can

lower

high levels of homocysteine by eating plenty of leafy greens and whole

grains

for folic acid and pyridoxine; and meat, fish or dairy products for

vitamin

B12.

Homocysteine and cognitive function in the Sacramento area Latino study

on

aging. American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, 2003, Vol 78, Iss 3, pp

441-447.

JW , R Green, MI Ramos, LH , DM Mungas, WJ Jagust, MN Haan.

JW, Univ Calif , Med Ctr, Dept Med Pathol, Sch Med, Res III

Room

3200A,

4645 2nd Ave, Sacramento,CA 95817 USA

DRUGS THAT RAISE HOMOCYSTEINE

Gabe Mirkin, M.D.

A study from Tulane shows that several drugs used to prevent heart

attacks,

raise blood levels of homocysteine and therefore may actually increase

risk for heart attacks.

High blood levels of homocysteine increase your risk for a heart attack.

The

vitamin, Folic acid, is necessary to lower blood levels of homocysteine.

Anything

that lowers blood levels of folic acid increases your risk for a heart

attack. Glucophage, used to treat diabetes, and cholestyramine, used to

treat high

triglycerides, block the absorption of folic acid from the intestines to

raise blood levels of homocysteine. Niacin, used to treat high

cholesterol,

and

methotrexate, used to treat rheumatoid arthritis, block metabolism of

folic

acid in the body to lower blood levels of folic acid. To prevent heart

attacks,

doctors should prescribe folic acid along with any of these drugs:

methotrexate for rheumatoid arthritis, Glucophage (metformin) for

diabetes,

cholestyramine

for high blood triglycerides, or niacin for high cholesterol.

Treatment with folate or vitamins B6 and B 12 lowers plasma homocysteine

levels effectively. Drugs affecting homocysteine metabolism - Impact on

cardiovascular

risk. Drugs, 2002, Vol 62, Iss 4, pp 605-616. C Desouza, M Keebler, DB

McNamara, V Fonseca. Fonseca V, Tulane Univ, Sch Med, 1430 Tulane Ave

SL-53,

New

Orleans,LA 70112 USA

HOMOCYSTEINE

Report #6813 10/24/95

Almost every society that eats a lot of fat suffers a high rate of heart

attacks. However, notable exceptions include French farmers who drink a

lot

of

wine and the Greeks and Italians who eat a lot of olive oil. Some

scientists

attribute the French protection from heart attacks to resveritol in wine

and the Greek and italian protection to the monounsaturated fats in

olive oil.

However, a recent report from the Harvard School of Public Health shows

that their protection from heart attacks is more likely caused by the

large

amount of leafy green vegetables, beans and fruits that they eat (1).

People admitted to Boston hospitals for their first heart attacks

were found to have much higher than normal blood levels of homocysteine,

a

protein building block that accumulates in the bloodstream when a

person's

diet

is deficient in the vitamins: folic acid, B6 and B12, but, those

suffering

from heart attacks also have low blood levels of folic acid, rather than

of B12 and B6.

Fruits, leafy green vegetables and beans are rich sources of the

vitamin,

folic acid. One of it's functions is to convert the essential amino

acid,

methionine,

to the non-essential amino acid, cysteine. Lack of folic acid blocks

this

reaction, causing an intermediate product called homocysteine to

accumulate

in

the bloodstream. Homocysteine punches holes in arteries and forms

plaques

and clots in them. So, not eating enough fruits and vegetables deprives

you

of

folic acid, causing homocystine to accumulate which causes

arteriosclerosis

and heart attacks. Homocysteine blood tests can be used as a screening

test for heart attacks on all American men today.

By Gabe Mirkin, M.D., for CBS Radio News

1) P Verhoef, MJ Stampfer, JE Buring, JM Gaziano, RH , SP Stabler,

RD

Reynolds, FJ Kok, CH Hennekens, WC Willett. Homocysteine metabolism and

risk of myocardial infarction: Relation with vitamins B-6, B-12, and

folate.

American Journal of Epidemiology 143: 9(MAY 1 1996):845-859.

2) JAMA October 4, 1995 (More than 10% of heart attacks are caused by

lack

of folic acid.) You need at least 400 micrograms of folic acid a day to

prevent

homocysteine from accumulating in your bloodstream.

ALZHEIMER'S DISEASE AND HOMOCYSTEINE

Gabe Mirkin, M.D.

The most common cause of senility in North America is Alzheimer's

disease, a

horrible condition in which a person loses his capacity to reason,

think,

recognize

and function. A study in the New England Journal of Medicine shows that

people who have high blood levels of a protein called homocysteine are

the

ones

most likely to suffer Alzheimer's disease(1).

Former president Reagan has Alzheimer's disease, as do some Nobel

Prize winners and some of the most brilliant people who have walked this

earth.

An article in the Journal of the American Medical Association showed

that

extraordinarily poor people in Ibadan, Nigeria are far less likely to

develop

Alzheimer's disease than their relatives in Indianapolis, further

confirming

that Alzheimer's disease is probably not genetic but is caused by

something in North American lifestyle or environment (2). One in ten

North Americans

develop Alzheimer's disease by age 65, and 5 in 10 develop it by age 85.

Alzheimer's disease means that the brain is damaged and dying brain

cells

mix with tangles of the protein beta amyloid. Ten years ago, the

Kentucky

nuns

study showed that nuns who have the most ministrokes show the symptoms

of

Alzheimer's disease, while many with lots of beta amyloid do not have

signs

of

that disease. Anything that increases your chances of developing a

stroke or

a heart attack also increases your chances of developing Alzheimer's

disease.

So the risk factors for Alzheimer's disease include smoking, being

overweight, not exercising, eating a high fat diet, eating too many

calories, and having

high blood pressure or high blood cholesterol levels. Dietary risk

factors

include not eating enough vegetables; lack of omega-3 fatty acids found

in

whole

grains, beans, seeds and deep water fish; and eating too much meat.

Dr. Snowden shows in his Kentucky Nuns Study that nuns who were

most

likely to suffer Alzheimer's disease have low blood levels of the

vitamin

folic

acid and high levels of the protein building block homocysteine. Not

eating

enough leafy greens and whole grains can deprive you of the vitamin

folic

acid,

and eating too much meat provides you with too much methionine, and the

combination of these two factors raises brain levels of homocysteine,

that

punches

holes in arteries and causes plaques to form in them to cause

ministrokes,

which damages your brain.

Methionine is an essential protein building block that your body uses to

make another nonessential building block called cysteine. If you lack

any of

the

three vitamins: B12, folic acid or pyridoxine, methionine is converted

to a

poison called homocysteine that damages arteries and causes strokes,

heart attacks and Alzheimer's disease. Meat is one of the richest

sources of

methionine, and leafy greens and whole grains are full of folic acid

that

prevents

methionine from being converted to homocysteine. Reducing your intake of

meat and poultry lowers your intake of methionine. Folic acid is found

everywhere

in nature that you get carbohydrates, because folic acid helps your body

convert carbohydrates to energy. You can help to prevent Alzheimer's

disease

by

getting folic acid from all whole grains and fortified cereals, leafy

green

vegetables, beans, seeds, nuts, and many other plants; and by reducing

your intake of methionine by eating less meat.

1)NEJM Feb 14, 2002.

2) JAMA February 14, 2001

To receive Dr. Mirkin's free health & fitness E-Zine each week, send a

blank

email to

subscribe@...

NEW BLOOD TESTS FOR HEART ATTACKS

Report #6577 8/12/95

If you want to learn your chances of suffering a heart attack, ask your

doctor to draw blood for the good HDL and the bad LDL cholesterols and

newer

tests

called, Lp(a), homocysteine and small low-density lipoprotein.

If your bad cholesterol is 100, you need at least a 40 good cholesterol

to

protect you. If your bad cholesterol is greater than 140, you need at

least

a

65 good cholesterol to protect you. However, there is far more to heart

attacks than just a good and bad cholesterol. Having high blood levels

of a

subfraction

of the bad LDL cholesterol called small LDL increases your risk for a

heart

attack.

Another test called homocysteine also predicts heart attacks. When your

diet

does not provide you with adequate amounts of the vitamins B12,

pyridoxine and folic acid, blood levels of homocysteine rise, damaging

the walls of the

arteries and causing plaques to form. Another genetic disorder called

Lp(a) cause clots to form and heart attacks. A coronary profile nowadays

can

include blood levels of the good HDL and bad LDL cholesterols, small

LDL,

homocysteine

and Lp(A). If your good HDL is low or your bad LDL is high, you need a

very

low-fat, very high-fiber diet and sometimes medications. If your

homocysteine

is high, you need to eat more fruits, vegetables, whole grains and beans

and

perhaps take high potency B vitamins. If your Lp(a) id high, you need to

be on high doses of niacin pills and women who lack estrogen need to

take that

hormone.

By Gabe Mirkin, M.D., for CBS Radio News

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I wish I could smoke all I want, drink all I want and do lots of things that

I cannot go into now. Alas, a good shot of scotch would be good, but I have

practically given up all those things I have enjoyed in the past. I did not

give them up because of obtaining a puritan state of consciousness, but

because it makes me feel bad after a while, and I might add after a short

while of indulging in such delights. Now I depend on my fantasy to cheer me

up.

As far as I can tell Actos is different than Glucophage.

Yes, I increased my folic acid from 1.2 grams to 2 grams in the past month

while decreasing my niacin from 1 gram three times per day to 500 mg once

per day. Still my homocysteine level rose. Some times it just seems like

one is damned if they do and damned if they don't. Right now I feel like

punting.

RE: homocysteine

> Well Harry,

> Sure looks like one should be blamed careful with what one consumes.

> I wonder if Actos is different than Glucophage.

> What about your large doses of Niacin? Did you also increase your intake

> of Folic Acid?

> You know, before I am done I will either be well informed or Looney.

> If it is Looney then I will be sure to take my Folic Acid, B6 and B12.

> Let's see, oh yes, I do need Niacin to raise something and lower

> something else. Wonder if a good shot of Dewar's White Label would

> suffice?

> Cy, Crystal & Grady...

>

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Share on other sites

good stuff, thanks harry!

Regards,

homocysteine

HOMOCYSTEINE CAUSES CLOTS

Gabe Mirkin, M.D.

A study from France shows that people who get clots in the heart, lungs,

brain or muscles should get blood tests for homocysteine and Lp(a).

After a person suffers from a heart attack, stroke, or lung or muscle clot,

doctors routinely look for obesity, cancer, family history of clotting,

birth

control pills, high cholesterol and factor V Leiden disease. They should

also check blood levels of homocysteine and Lp(a). Lack of any one of three

vitamins

causes the clot-forming homocysteine to accumulate in your bloodstream. You

can lower blood levels of homocysteine to normal by taking folic acid,

vitamin

B12 and pyridoxine. If you have a genetic disorder, Lp(a), that causes

clots, you can lower Lp(a) to normal by taking another vitamin called

niacin. So,

people who suffer clots need blood tests for homocysteine and Lp(a), two

conditions that can be cured by taking vitamins.

Red blood cell methylfolate and plasma homocysteine as risk factors for

venous thromboembolism: a matched case-control study. Lancet, 2002, Vol 359,

Iss

9308, pp 747-752. I Quere, TV Perneger, J Zittoun, H Bellet, JC Gris, JP

Daures, JF Schved, E Mercier, JP Laroche, M Dauzat, H Bounameaux, C Janbon,

P

deMoerloose.

HOMOCYSTEINE AND LOSS OF MENTAL FUNCTION

Gabe Mirkin, M.D.

A study from the University of California at shows that people with

high blood levels of homocysteine are at high risk for loss of mental

function

and even Alzheimer's disease.

Your body requires 20 protein building blocks called amino acids, but only

nine are essential (meaning that you must get them from your food); your

body

can make the rest from the essential nine. It can use the amino acid,

methionine, to make another amino acid, cysteine. But if you lack any one of

the

three vitamins: B12, folic acid, or pyridoxine, your body converts

methionine to a poison called homocysteine that plugs up arteries to cause

heart attacks

and strokes. Anything that damages arteries can also cause loss of mental

function. So people with high blood level of homocysteine are at high risk

for

heart attacks, strokes, and dementia or Alzheimer's disease. You can lower

high levels of homocysteine by eating plenty of leafy greens and whole

grains

for folic acid and pyridoxine; and meat, fish or dairy products for vitamin

B12.

Homocysteine and cognitive function in the Sacramento area Latino study on

aging. American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, 2003, Vol 78, Iss 3, pp

441-447.

JW , R Green, MI Ramos, LH , DM Mungas, WJ Jagust, MN Haan.

JW, Univ Calif , Med Ctr, Dept Med Pathol, Sch Med, Res III Room

3200A,

4645 2nd Ave, Sacramento,CA 95817 USA

DRUGS THAT RAISE HOMOCYSTEINE

Gabe Mirkin, M.D.

A study from Tulane shows that several drugs used to prevent heart attacks,

raise blood levels of homocysteine and therefore may actually increase risk

for heart attacks.

High blood levels of homocysteine increase your risk for a heart attack. The

vitamin, Folic acid, is necessary to lower blood levels of homocysteine.

Anything

that lowers blood levels of folic acid increases your risk for a heart

attack. Glucophage, used to treat diabetes, and cholestyramine, used to

treat high

triglycerides, block the absorption of folic acid from the intestines to

raise blood levels of homocysteine. Niacin, used to treat high cholesterol,

and

methotrexate, used to treat rheumatoid arthritis, block metabolism of folic

acid in the body to lower blood levels of folic acid. To prevent heart

attacks,

doctors should prescribe folic acid along with any of these drugs:

methotrexate for rheumatoid arthritis, Glucophage (metformin) for diabetes,

cholestyramine

for high blood triglycerides, or niacin for high cholesterol.

Treatment with folate or vitamins B6 and B 12 lowers plasma homocysteine

levels effectively. Drugs affecting homocysteine metabolism - Impact on

cardiovascular

risk. Drugs, 2002, Vol 62, Iss 4, pp 605-616. C Desouza, M Keebler, DB

McNamara, V Fonseca. Fonseca V, Tulane Univ, Sch Med, 1430 Tulane Ave SL-53,

New

Orleans,LA 70112 USA

HOMOCYSTEINE

Report #6813 10/24/95

Almost every society that eats a lot of fat suffers a high rate of heart

attacks. However, notable exceptions include French farmers who drink a lot

of

wine and the Greeks and Italians who eat a lot of olive oil. Some scientists

attribute the French protection from heart attacks to resveritol in wine and

the Greek and italian protection to the monounsaturated fats in olive oil.

However, a recent report from the Harvard School of Public Health shows that

their protection from heart attacks is more likely caused by the large

amount of leafy green vegetables, beans and fruits that they eat (1).

People admitted to Boston hospitals for their first heart attacks

were found to have much higher than normal blood levels of homocysteine, a

protein building block that accumulates in the bloodstream when a person's

diet

is deficient in the vitamins: folic acid, B6 and B12, but, those suffering

from heart attacks also have low blood levels of folic acid, rather than of

B12 and B6.

Fruits, leafy green vegetables and beans are rich sources of the vitamin,

folic acid. One of it's functions is to convert the essential amino acid,

methionine,

to the non-essential amino acid, cysteine. Lack of folic acid blocks this

reaction, causing an intermediate product called homocysteine to accumulate

in

the bloodstream. Homocysteine punches holes in arteries and forms plaques

and clots in them. So, not eating enough fruits and vegetables deprives you

of

folic acid, causing homocystine to accumulate which causes arteriosclerosis

and heart attacks. Homocysteine blood tests can be used as a screening test

for heart attacks on all American men today.

By Gabe Mirkin, M.D., for CBS Radio News

1) P Verhoef, MJ Stampfer, JE Buring, JM Gaziano, RH , SP Stabler, RD

Reynolds, FJ Kok, CH Hennekens, WC Willett. Homocysteine metabolism and risk

of myocardial infarction: Relation with vitamins B-6, B-12, and folate.

American Journal of Epidemiology 143: 9(MAY 1 1996):845-859.

2) JAMA October 4, 1995 (More than 10% of heart attacks are caused by lack

of folic acid.) You need at least 400 micrograms of folic acid a day to

prevent

homocysteine from accumulating in your bloodstream.

ALZHEIMER'S DISEASE AND HOMOCYSTEINE

Gabe Mirkin, M.D.

The most common cause of senility in North America is Alzheimer's disease, a

horrible condition in which a person loses his capacity to reason, think,

recognize

and function. A study in the New England Journal of Medicine shows that

people who have high blood levels of a protein called homocysteine are the

ones

most likely to suffer Alzheimer's disease(1).

Former president Reagan has Alzheimer's disease, as do some Nobel

Prize winners and some of the most brilliant people who have walked this

earth.

An article in the Journal of the American Medical Association showed that

extraordinarily poor people in Ibadan, Nigeria are far less likely to

develop

Alzheimer's disease than their relatives in Indianapolis, further confirming

that Alzheimer's disease is probably not genetic but is caused by something

in North American lifestyle or environment (2). One in ten North Americans

develop Alzheimer's disease by age 65, and 5 in 10 develop it by age 85.

Alzheimer's disease means that the brain is damaged and dying brain cells

mix with tangles of the protein beta amyloid. Ten years ago, the Kentucky

nuns

study showed that nuns who have the most ministrokes show the symptoms of

Alzheimer's disease, while many with lots of beta amyloid do not have signs

of

that disease. Anything that increases your chances of developing a stroke or

a heart attack also increases your chances of developing Alzheimer's

disease.

So the risk factors for Alzheimer's disease include smoking, being

overweight, not exercising, eating a high fat diet, eating too many

calories, and having

high blood pressure or high blood cholesterol levels. Dietary risk factors

include not eating enough vegetables; lack of omega-3 fatty acids found in

whole

grains, beans, seeds and deep water fish; and eating too much meat.

Dr. Snowden shows in his Kentucky Nuns Study that nuns who were most

likely to suffer Alzheimer's disease have low blood levels of the vitamin

folic

acid and high levels of the protein building block homocysteine. Not eating

enough leafy greens and whole grains can deprive you of the vitamin folic

acid,

and eating too much meat provides you with too much methionine, and the

combination of these two factors raises brain levels of homocysteine, that

punches

holes in arteries and causes plaques to form in them to cause ministrokes,

which damages your brain.

Methionine is an essential protein building block that your body uses to

make another nonessential building block called cysteine. If you lack any of

the

three vitamins: B12, folic acid or pyridoxine, methionine is converted to a

poison called homocysteine that damages arteries and causes strokes, heart

attacks and Alzheimer's disease. Meat is one of the richest sources of

methionine, and leafy greens and whole grains are full of folic acid that

prevents

methionine from being converted to homocysteine. Reducing your intake of

meat and poultry lowers your intake of methionine. Folic acid is found

everywhere

in nature that you get carbohydrates, because folic acid helps your body

convert carbohydrates to energy. You can help to prevent Alzheimer's disease

by

getting folic acid from all whole grains and fortified cereals, leafy green

vegetables, beans, seeds, nuts, and many other plants; and by reducing your

intake of methionine by eating less meat.

1)NEJM Feb 14, 2002.

2) JAMA February 14, 2001

To receive Dr. Mirkin's free health & fitness E-Zine each week, send a blank

email to

subscribe@...

NEW BLOOD TESTS FOR HEART ATTACKS

Report #6577 8/12/95

If you want to learn your chances of suffering a heart attack, ask your

doctor to draw blood for the good HDL and the bad LDL cholesterols and newer

tests

called, Lp(a), homocysteine and small low-density lipoprotein.

If your bad cholesterol is 100, you need at least a 40 good cholesterol to

protect you. If your bad cholesterol is greater than 140, you need at least

a

65 good cholesterol to protect you. However, there is far more to heart

attacks than just a good and bad cholesterol. Having high blood levels of a

subfraction

of the bad LDL cholesterol called small LDL increases your risk for a heart

attack.

Another test called homocysteine also predicts heart attacks. When your diet

does not provide you with adequate amounts of the vitamins B12, pyridoxine

and folic acid, blood levels of homocysteine rise, damaging the walls of the

arteries and causing plaques to form. Another genetic disorder called Lp(a)

cause clots to form and heart attacks. A coronary profile nowadays can

include blood levels of the good HDL and bad LDL cholesterols, small LDL,

homocysteine

and Lp(A). If your good HDL is low or your bad LDL is high, you need a very

low-fat, very high-fiber diet and sometimes medications. If your

homocysteine

is high, you need to eat more fruits, vegetables, whole grains and beans and

perhaps take high potency B vitamins. If your Lp(a) id high, you need to be

on high doses of niacin pills and women who lack estrogen need to take that

hormone.

By Gabe Mirkin, M.D., for CBS Radio News

Link to comment
Share on other sites

good stuff, thanks harry!

Regards,

homocysteine

HOMOCYSTEINE CAUSES CLOTS

Gabe Mirkin, M.D.

A study from France shows that people who get clots in the heart, lungs,

brain or muscles should get blood tests for homocysteine and Lp(a).

After a person suffers from a heart attack, stroke, or lung or muscle clot,

doctors routinely look for obesity, cancer, family history of clotting,

birth

control pills, high cholesterol and factor V Leiden disease. They should

also check blood levels of homocysteine and Lp(a). Lack of any one of three

vitamins

causes the clot-forming homocysteine to accumulate in your bloodstream. You

can lower blood levels of homocysteine to normal by taking folic acid,

vitamin

B12 and pyridoxine. If you have a genetic disorder, Lp(a), that causes

clots, you can lower Lp(a) to normal by taking another vitamin called

niacin. So,

people who suffer clots need blood tests for homocysteine and Lp(a), two

conditions that can be cured by taking vitamins.

Red blood cell methylfolate and plasma homocysteine as risk factors for

venous thromboembolism: a matched case-control study. Lancet, 2002, Vol 359,

Iss

9308, pp 747-752. I Quere, TV Perneger, J Zittoun, H Bellet, JC Gris, JP

Daures, JF Schved, E Mercier, JP Laroche, M Dauzat, H Bounameaux, C Janbon,

P

deMoerloose.

HOMOCYSTEINE AND LOSS OF MENTAL FUNCTION

Gabe Mirkin, M.D.

A study from the University of California at shows that people with

high blood levels of homocysteine are at high risk for loss of mental

function

and even Alzheimer's disease.

Your body requires 20 protein building blocks called amino acids, but only

nine are essential (meaning that you must get them from your food); your

body

can make the rest from the essential nine. It can use the amino acid,

methionine, to make another amino acid, cysteine. But if you lack any one of

the

three vitamins: B12, folic acid, or pyridoxine, your body converts

methionine to a poison called homocysteine that plugs up arteries to cause

heart attacks

and strokes. Anything that damages arteries can also cause loss of mental

function. So people with high blood level of homocysteine are at high risk

for

heart attacks, strokes, and dementia or Alzheimer's disease. You can lower

high levels of homocysteine by eating plenty of leafy greens and whole

grains

for folic acid and pyridoxine; and meat, fish or dairy products for vitamin

B12.

Homocysteine and cognitive function in the Sacramento area Latino study on

aging. American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, 2003, Vol 78, Iss 3, pp

441-447.

JW , R Green, MI Ramos, LH , DM Mungas, WJ Jagust, MN Haan.

JW, Univ Calif , Med Ctr, Dept Med Pathol, Sch Med, Res III Room

3200A,

4645 2nd Ave, Sacramento,CA 95817 USA

DRUGS THAT RAISE HOMOCYSTEINE

Gabe Mirkin, M.D.

A study from Tulane shows that several drugs used to prevent heart attacks,

raise blood levels of homocysteine and therefore may actually increase risk

for heart attacks.

High blood levels of homocysteine increase your risk for a heart attack. The

vitamin, Folic acid, is necessary to lower blood levels of homocysteine.

Anything

that lowers blood levels of folic acid increases your risk for a heart

attack. Glucophage, used to treat diabetes, and cholestyramine, used to

treat high

triglycerides, block the absorption of folic acid from the intestines to

raise blood levels of homocysteine. Niacin, used to treat high cholesterol,

and

methotrexate, used to treat rheumatoid arthritis, block metabolism of folic

acid in the body to lower blood levels of folic acid. To prevent heart

attacks,

doctors should prescribe folic acid along with any of these drugs:

methotrexate for rheumatoid arthritis, Glucophage (metformin) for diabetes,

cholestyramine

for high blood triglycerides, or niacin for high cholesterol.

Treatment with folate or vitamins B6 and B 12 lowers plasma homocysteine

levels effectively. Drugs affecting homocysteine metabolism - Impact on

cardiovascular

risk. Drugs, 2002, Vol 62, Iss 4, pp 605-616. C Desouza, M Keebler, DB

McNamara, V Fonseca. Fonseca V, Tulane Univ, Sch Med, 1430 Tulane Ave SL-53,

New

Orleans,LA 70112 USA

HOMOCYSTEINE

Report #6813 10/24/95

Almost every society that eats a lot of fat suffers a high rate of heart

attacks. However, notable exceptions include French farmers who drink a lot

of

wine and the Greeks and Italians who eat a lot of olive oil. Some scientists

attribute the French protection from heart attacks to resveritol in wine and

the Greek and italian protection to the monounsaturated fats in olive oil.

However, a recent report from the Harvard School of Public Health shows that

their protection from heart attacks is more likely caused by the large

amount of leafy green vegetables, beans and fruits that they eat (1).

People admitted to Boston hospitals for their first heart attacks

were found to have much higher than normal blood levels of homocysteine, a

protein building block that accumulates in the bloodstream when a person's

diet

is deficient in the vitamins: folic acid, B6 and B12, but, those suffering

from heart attacks also have low blood levels of folic acid, rather than of

B12 and B6.

Fruits, leafy green vegetables and beans are rich sources of the vitamin,

folic acid. One of it's functions is to convert the essential amino acid,

methionine,

to the non-essential amino acid, cysteine. Lack of folic acid blocks this

reaction, causing an intermediate product called homocysteine to accumulate

in

the bloodstream. Homocysteine punches holes in arteries and forms plaques

and clots in them. So, not eating enough fruits and vegetables deprives you

of

folic acid, causing homocystine to accumulate which causes arteriosclerosis

and heart attacks. Homocysteine blood tests can be used as a screening test

for heart attacks on all American men today.

By Gabe Mirkin, M.D., for CBS Radio News

1) P Verhoef, MJ Stampfer, JE Buring, JM Gaziano, RH , SP Stabler, RD

Reynolds, FJ Kok, CH Hennekens, WC Willett. Homocysteine metabolism and risk

of myocardial infarction: Relation with vitamins B-6, B-12, and folate.

American Journal of Epidemiology 143: 9(MAY 1 1996):845-859.

2) JAMA October 4, 1995 (More than 10% of heart attacks are caused by lack

of folic acid.) You need at least 400 micrograms of folic acid a day to

prevent

homocysteine from accumulating in your bloodstream.

ALZHEIMER'S DISEASE AND HOMOCYSTEINE

Gabe Mirkin, M.D.

The most common cause of senility in North America is Alzheimer's disease, a

horrible condition in which a person loses his capacity to reason, think,

recognize

and function. A study in the New England Journal of Medicine shows that

people who have high blood levels of a protein called homocysteine are the

ones

most likely to suffer Alzheimer's disease(1).

Former president Reagan has Alzheimer's disease, as do some Nobel

Prize winners and some of the most brilliant people who have walked this

earth.

An article in the Journal of the American Medical Association showed that

extraordinarily poor people in Ibadan, Nigeria are far less likely to

develop

Alzheimer's disease than their relatives in Indianapolis, further confirming

that Alzheimer's disease is probably not genetic but is caused by something

in North American lifestyle or environment (2). One in ten North Americans

develop Alzheimer's disease by age 65, and 5 in 10 develop it by age 85.

Alzheimer's disease means that the brain is damaged and dying brain cells

mix with tangles of the protein beta amyloid. Ten years ago, the Kentucky

nuns

study showed that nuns who have the most ministrokes show the symptoms of

Alzheimer's disease, while many with lots of beta amyloid do not have signs

of

that disease. Anything that increases your chances of developing a stroke or

a heart attack also increases your chances of developing Alzheimer's

disease.

So the risk factors for Alzheimer's disease include smoking, being

overweight, not exercising, eating a high fat diet, eating too many

calories, and having

high blood pressure or high blood cholesterol levels. Dietary risk factors

include not eating enough vegetables; lack of omega-3 fatty acids found in

whole

grains, beans, seeds and deep water fish; and eating too much meat.

Dr. Snowden shows in his Kentucky Nuns Study that nuns who were most

likely to suffer Alzheimer's disease have low blood levels of the vitamin

folic

acid and high levels of the protein building block homocysteine. Not eating

enough leafy greens and whole grains can deprive you of the vitamin folic

acid,

and eating too much meat provides you with too much methionine, and the

combination of these two factors raises brain levels of homocysteine, that

punches

holes in arteries and causes plaques to form in them to cause ministrokes,

which damages your brain.

Methionine is an essential protein building block that your body uses to

make another nonessential building block called cysteine. If you lack any of

the

three vitamins: B12, folic acid or pyridoxine, methionine is converted to a

poison called homocysteine that damages arteries and causes strokes, heart

attacks and Alzheimer's disease. Meat is one of the richest sources of

methionine, and leafy greens and whole grains are full of folic acid that

prevents

methionine from being converted to homocysteine. Reducing your intake of

meat and poultry lowers your intake of methionine. Folic acid is found

everywhere

in nature that you get carbohydrates, because folic acid helps your body

convert carbohydrates to energy. You can help to prevent Alzheimer's disease

by

getting folic acid from all whole grains and fortified cereals, leafy green

vegetables, beans, seeds, nuts, and many other plants; and by reducing your

intake of methionine by eating less meat.

1)NEJM Feb 14, 2002.

2) JAMA February 14, 2001

To receive Dr. Mirkin's free health & fitness E-Zine each week, send a blank

email to

subscribe@...

NEW BLOOD TESTS FOR HEART ATTACKS

Report #6577 8/12/95

If you want to learn your chances of suffering a heart attack, ask your

doctor to draw blood for the good HDL and the bad LDL cholesterols and newer

tests

called, Lp(a), homocysteine and small low-density lipoprotein.

If your bad cholesterol is 100, you need at least a 40 good cholesterol to

protect you. If your bad cholesterol is greater than 140, you need at least

a

65 good cholesterol to protect you. However, there is far more to heart

attacks than just a good and bad cholesterol. Having high blood levels of a

subfraction

of the bad LDL cholesterol called small LDL increases your risk for a heart

attack.

Another test called homocysteine also predicts heart attacks. When your diet

does not provide you with adequate amounts of the vitamins B12, pyridoxine

and folic acid, blood levels of homocysteine rise, damaging the walls of the

arteries and causing plaques to form. Another genetic disorder called Lp(a)

cause clots to form and heart attacks. A coronary profile nowadays can

include blood levels of the good HDL and bad LDL cholesterols, small LDL,

homocysteine

and Lp(A). If your good HDL is low or your bad LDL is high, you need a very

low-fat, very high-fiber diet and sometimes medications. If your

homocysteine

is high, you need to eat more fruits, vegetables, whole grains and beans and

perhaps take high potency B vitamins. If your Lp(a) id high, you need to be

on high doses of niacin pills and women who lack estrogen need to take that

hormone.

By Gabe Mirkin, M.D., for CBS Radio News

Link to comment
Share on other sites

good stuff, thanks harry!

Regards,

homocysteine

HOMOCYSTEINE CAUSES CLOTS

Gabe Mirkin, M.D.

A study from France shows that people who get clots in the heart, lungs,

brain or muscles should get blood tests for homocysteine and Lp(a).

After a person suffers from a heart attack, stroke, or lung or muscle clot,

doctors routinely look for obesity, cancer, family history of clotting,

birth

control pills, high cholesterol and factor V Leiden disease. They should

also check blood levels of homocysteine and Lp(a). Lack of any one of three

vitamins

causes the clot-forming homocysteine to accumulate in your bloodstream. You

can lower blood levels of homocysteine to normal by taking folic acid,

vitamin

B12 and pyridoxine. If you have a genetic disorder, Lp(a), that causes

clots, you can lower Lp(a) to normal by taking another vitamin called

niacin. So,

people who suffer clots need blood tests for homocysteine and Lp(a), two

conditions that can be cured by taking vitamins.

Red blood cell methylfolate and plasma homocysteine as risk factors for

venous thromboembolism: a matched case-control study. Lancet, 2002, Vol 359,

Iss

9308, pp 747-752. I Quere, TV Perneger, J Zittoun, H Bellet, JC Gris, JP

Daures, JF Schved, E Mercier, JP Laroche, M Dauzat, H Bounameaux, C Janbon,

P

deMoerloose.

HOMOCYSTEINE AND LOSS OF MENTAL FUNCTION

Gabe Mirkin, M.D.

A study from the University of California at shows that people with

high blood levels of homocysteine are at high risk for loss of mental

function

and even Alzheimer's disease.

Your body requires 20 protein building blocks called amino acids, but only

nine are essential (meaning that you must get them from your food); your

body

can make the rest from the essential nine. It can use the amino acid,

methionine, to make another amino acid, cysteine. But if you lack any one of

the

three vitamins: B12, folic acid, or pyridoxine, your body converts

methionine to a poison called homocysteine that plugs up arteries to cause

heart attacks

and strokes. Anything that damages arteries can also cause loss of mental

function. So people with high blood level of homocysteine are at high risk

for

heart attacks, strokes, and dementia or Alzheimer's disease. You can lower

high levels of homocysteine by eating plenty of leafy greens and whole

grains

for folic acid and pyridoxine; and meat, fish or dairy products for vitamin

B12.

Homocysteine and cognitive function in the Sacramento area Latino study on

aging. American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, 2003, Vol 78, Iss 3, pp

441-447.

JW , R Green, MI Ramos, LH , DM Mungas, WJ Jagust, MN Haan.

JW, Univ Calif , Med Ctr, Dept Med Pathol, Sch Med, Res III Room

3200A,

4645 2nd Ave, Sacramento,CA 95817 USA

DRUGS THAT RAISE HOMOCYSTEINE

Gabe Mirkin, M.D.

A study from Tulane shows that several drugs used to prevent heart attacks,

raise blood levels of homocysteine and therefore may actually increase risk

for heart attacks.

High blood levels of homocysteine increase your risk for a heart attack. The

vitamin, Folic acid, is necessary to lower blood levels of homocysteine.

Anything

that lowers blood levels of folic acid increases your risk for a heart

attack. Glucophage, used to treat diabetes, and cholestyramine, used to

treat high

triglycerides, block the absorption of folic acid from the intestines to

raise blood levels of homocysteine. Niacin, used to treat high cholesterol,

and

methotrexate, used to treat rheumatoid arthritis, block metabolism of folic

acid in the body to lower blood levels of folic acid. To prevent heart

attacks,

doctors should prescribe folic acid along with any of these drugs:

methotrexate for rheumatoid arthritis, Glucophage (metformin) for diabetes,

cholestyramine

for high blood triglycerides, or niacin for high cholesterol.

Treatment with folate or vitamins B6 and B 12 lowers plasma homocysteine

levels effectively. Drugs affecting homocysteine metabolism - Impact on

cardiovascular

risk. Drugs, 2002, Vol 62, Iss 4, pp 605-616. C Desouza, M Keebler, DB

McNamara, V Fonseca. Fonseca V, Tulane Univ, Sch Med, 1430 Tulane Ave SL-53,

New

Orleans,LA 70112 USA

HOMOCYSTEINE

Report #6813 10/24/95

Almost every society that eats a lot of fat suffers a high rate of heart

attacks. However, notable exceptions include French farmers who drink a lot

of

wine and the Greeks and Italians who eat a lot of olive oil. Some scientists

attribute the French protection from heart attacks to resveritol in wine and

the Greek and italian protection to the monounsaturated fats in olive oil.

However, a recent report from the Harvard School of Public Health shows that

their protection from heart attacks is more likely caused by the large

amount of leafy green vegetables, beans and fruits that they eat (1).

People admitted to Boston hospitals for their first heart attacks

were found to have much higher than normal blood levels of homocysteine, a

protein building block that accumulates in the bloodstream when a person's

diet

is deficient in the vitamins: folic acid, B6 and B12, but, those suffering

from heart attacks also have low blood levels of folic acid, rather than of

B12 and B6.

Fruits, leafy green vegetables and beans are rich sources of the vitamin,

folic acid. One of it's functions is to convert the essential amino acid,

methionine,

to the non-essential amino acid, cysteine. Lack of folic acid blocks this

reaction, causing an intermediate product called homocysteine to accumulate

in

the bloodstream. Homocysteine punches holes in arteries and forms plaques

and clots in them. So, not eating enough fruits and vegetables deprives you

of

folic acid, causing homocystine to accumulate which causes arteriosclerosis

and heart attacks. Homocysteine blood tests can be used as a screening test

for heart attacks on all American men today.

By Gabe Mirkin, M.D., for CBS Radio News

1) P Verhoef, MJ Stampfer, JE Buring, JM Gaziano, RH , SP Stabler, RD

Reynolds, FJ Kok, CH Hennekens, WC Willett. Homocysteine metabolism and risk

of myocardial infarction: Relation with vitamins B-6, B-12, and folate.

American Journal of Epidemiology 143: 9(MAY 1 1996):845-859.

2) JAMA October 4, 1995 (More than 10% of heart attacks are caused by lack

of folic acid.) You need at least 400 micrograms of folic acid a day to

prevent

homocysteine from accumulating in your bloodstream.

ALZHEIMER'S DISEASE AND HOMOCYSTEINE

Gabe Mirkin, M.D.

The most common cause of senility in North America is Alzheimer's disease, a

horrible condition in which a person loses his capacity to reason, think,

recognize

and function. A study in the New England Journal of Medicine shows that

people who have high blood levels of a protein called homocysteine are the

ones

most likely to suffer Alzheimer's disease(1).

Former president Reagan has Alzheimer's disease, as do some Nobel

Prize winners and some of the most brilliant people who have walked this

earth.

An article in the Journal of the American Medical Association showed that

extraordinarily poor people in Ibadan, Nigeria are far less likely to

develop

Alzheimer's disease than their relatives in Indianapolis, further confirming

that Alzheimer's disease is probably not genetic but is caused by something

in North American lifestyle or environment (2). One in ten North Americans

develop Alzheimer's disease by age 65, and 5 in 10 develop it by age 85.

Alzheimer's disease means that the brain is damaged and dying brain cells

mix with tangles of the protein beta amyloid. Ten years ago, the Kentucky

nuns

study showed that nuns who have the most ministrokes show the symptoms of

Alzheimer's disease, while many with lots of beta amyloid do not have signs

of

that disease. Anything that increases your chances of developing a stroke or

a heart attack also increases your chances of developing Alzheimer's

disease.

So the risk factors for Alzheimer's disease include smoking, being

overweight, not exercising, eating a high fat diet, eating too many

calories, and having

high blood pressure or high blood cholesterol levels. Dietary risk factors

include not eating enough vegetables; lack of omega-3 fatty acids found in

whole

grains, beans, seeds and deep water fish; and eating too much meat.

Dr. Snowden shows in his Kentucky Nuns Study that nuns who were most

likely to suffer Alzheimer's disease have low blood levels of the vitamin

folic

acid and high levels of the protein building block homocysteine. Not eating

enough leafy greens and whole grains can deprive you of the vitamin folic

acid,

and eating too much meat provides you with too much methionine, and the

combination of these two factors raises brain levels of homocysteine, that

punches

holes in arteries and causes plaques to form in them to cause ministrokes,

which damages your brain.

Methionine is an essential protein building block that your body uses to

make another nonessential building block called cysteine. If you lack any of

the

three vitamins: B12, folic acid or pyridoxine, methionine is converted to a

poison called homocysteine that damages arteries and causes strokes, heart

attacks and Alzheimer's disease. Meat is one of the richest sources of

methionine, and leafy greens and whole grains are full of folic acid that

prevents

methionine from being converted to homocysteine. Reducing your intake of

meat and poultry lowers your intake of methionine. Folic acid is found

everywhere

in nature that you get carbohydrates, because folic acid helps your body

convert carbohydrates to energy. You can help to prevent Alzheimer's disease

by

getting folic acid from all whole grains and fortified cereals, leafy green

vegetables, beans, seeds, nuts, and many other plants; and by reducing your

intake of methionine by eating less meat.

1)NEJM Feb 14, 2002.

2) JAMA February 14, 2001

To receive Dr. Mirkin's free health & fitness E-Zine each week, send a blank

email to

subscribe@...

NEW BLOOD TESTS FOR HEART ATTACKS

Report #6577 8/12/95

If you want to learn your chances of suffering a heart attack, ask your

doctor to draw blood for the good HDL and the bad LDL cholesterols and newer

tests

called, Lp(a), homocysteine and small low-density lipoprotein.

If your bad cholesterol is 100, you need at least a 40 good cholesterol to

protect you. If your bad cholesterol is greater than 140, you need at least

a

65 good cholesterol to protect you. However, there is far more to heart

attacks than just a good and bad cholesterol. Having high blood levels of a

subfraction

of the bad LDL cholesterol called small LDL increases your risk for a heart

attack.

Another test called homocysteine also predicts heart attacks. When your diet

does not provide you with adequate amounts of the vitamins B12, pyridoxine

and folic acid, blood levels of homocysteine rise, damaging the walls of the

arteries and causing plaques to form. Another genetic disorder called Lp(a)

cause clots to form and heart attacks. A coronary profile nowadays can

include blood levels of the good HDL and bad LDL cholesterols, small LDL,

homocysteine

and Lp(A). If your good HDL is low or your bad LDL is high, you need a very

low-fat, very high-fiber diet and sometimes medications. If your

homocysteine

is high, you need to eat more fruits, vegetables, whole grains and beans and

perhaps take high potency B vitamins. If your Lp(a) id high, you need to be

on high doses of niacin pills and women who lack estrogen need to take that

hormone.

By Gabe Mirkin, M.D., for CBS Radio News

Link to comment
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