| A New Era in Medicine
(1993)
Rath M. Journal of Orthomolecular Medicine, 8:134-135.
Summary
Health care and medicine in the 21st century will significantly
differ from the present: Nutritional medicine will be an essential
part of any future health care system.
Vitamins and other essential nutrients will be
accepted as effective, safe and affordable preventive and therapeutic
agents. Skepticism and bias against nutritional supplements, the
dominating attitudes during the second half of this century, will
be replaced by realism and objectivity.
As a result of an objective scientific attitude
towards essential nutrients medical research and scientific knowledge
will boost in an unprecedented way.
Most importantly, many diseases, which have become
hallmarks of the human race during this century, including cardiovascular
diseases, will eventually be eradicated.
On the occasion of the publication of my book "Eradicating
Heart Disease"
Full Study
The Ice Age - Cardiovascular
Disease Connection
My discovery of the Ice Age - vitamin deficiency - cardiovascular
disease connection will eventually lead to the eradication of
heart attacks, strokes and related cardiovascular diseases.2,3
Starting 2.5 million years ago the Ice Ages dramatically influenced
the gene pool of the human race. Blood loss through the vitamin
deficient and scorbutic vascular wall was the greatest threat
to the evolutionary survival of man. Inherited disorders leading
to cardiovascular and related diseases became Nature’s response
to protect the vessel wall during thousands of generations of
extreme vitamin deficiency. The Ice Age - Cardiovascular Disease
Axiom says: "Inherited disorders leading to thickening of
blood vessel walls or protecting the vessel wall in another way
during vitamin deficiency originated during the Ice Ages or were
greatly favored during that time. These diseases can be prevented
and treated by optimum intake of vitamins, particularly vitamin
C."
The Ice Age - cardiovascular disease connection
invalidates the term disease for heart attacks, strokes and related
cardiovascular disorders and defines them as conditions caused
by nutritional deficiencies. The same is true for many other inherited
disorders leading to a general thickening of body tissues including
the walls of the blood vessels. These disorders also had an evolutionary
advantage because they protected our ancestors from the fatal
consequences of vitamin deficiencies. Based on these discoveries
the following disorders could also be eradicated: diabetes, homocystinuria,
Alzheimer’s Disease, Parkinson’s Disease, cystic fibrosis,
muscular dystrophy, lupus erythematodes and dozens of other diseases.
The details of this discovery are discussed in my new book.
Eradicating Heart Disease
The eradication of heart disease is a realistic goal. Based o
the discoveries above and on growing scientific evidence accumulated
over the years I developed nutritional recommendations for optimum
cardiovascular health. Hundreds of patients are already following
these recommendations. Their amazing testimonials are important
elements of the book:
Cessation of angina pectoris within one or two
weeks Cessation of irregular heartbeat (arrhythmia) within days
a Cessation of shortness of breath Increase in physical and mental
strength
These effects are achieved by nutritional supplements
reversing impaired blood flow to the heart muscle as well as improving
metabolism of millions of heart cells. The most important among
these nutrients are vitamin C, vitamin E, niacin, lysine, proline,
coenzyme Q10, carnitine as well as certain minerals. Particular
emphasis in the book is given to my earlier discoveries of the
therapeutic effect of ascorbate, lysine and related compounds
in neutralizing the risk from lipoproten(a).5 Moreover, a new
therapeutic mechanism is described by which lysine and proline,
together with other essential nutrients, decrease the "atherosclerotic
tumor" in the vascular wall caused by smooth muscle cells.
Based on my earlier discoveries, my former colleague Linus Pauling
has gratefully undertaken the task to document the therapeutic
value of lysine in combination with ascorbate.6,7 In case histories
he reported the decrease of angina pectoris in patients taking
five grams and more of vitamin C and lysine for several months.
While these results are encouraging they also show the limitations
of a therapeutic approach based on two components: five to ten
times higher amounts of supplements and a longer time are needed
to bring relief to the patient. The recommendations documented
in my new book take nutritional medicine one step further towards
a comprehensive nutritional resupplementation for optimum cardiovascular
health. The immediate and profound health improvements even in
patients with a variety of severe heart conditions prove these
recommendations most effective for the treatment of different
heart diseases and related conditions. These recommendations stand
any comparison with prescription drugs in the therapy of angina
pectoris, arrhythmia, hypertension, heart failure as well as for
the prevention of diabetic vascular disease and other forms of
cardiovascular disease.
A Personal Chronology
My earlier publications in the Journal of Orthomolecular
Medicine triggered repeated interest in the history of these discoveries.
Thus, a brief personal chronology may be in order: In 1987, after
having discovered the lipoprotein(a)-vitamin C connection I recommended
vitamin C supplementation to an individual with high lipoprotein(a)
levels. This marks the first therapeutic attempt to lower elevated
blood concentrations of this risk factor by using vitamin C.8,9
During my research project at Hamburg University I used L-lysine
and synthetic lysine analogs to isolate lipoprotein(a) from blood
and from arterial walls. This suggested the therapeutic use of
lysine and synthetic lysine analogs5, a therapeutic technology
for which I recieved patents in the meantime.. In early 1990,
after the prominent role of lipoprotein(a) in human atherosclerosis
was established 10, I came to the United States to work on the
physiologic role of lipoprotein(a) as well as to pursue my earlier
therapeutic discoveries. My scientific discoveries over the year
were primarily published in the Journal of Orthomolecular Medicine
and I had generally invited my former colleague Linus Pauling
to join me as co-author. In September 1992 I founded my own research
firm to further promote research and education in nutritional
medicine.
For the Benefit of Humanity
My discoveries summarized in my new book open the door
to eliminate heart attacks, strokes and dozens of related disorders
in future generations of mankind. My recent discovery of the protein
code will further increase the efficiency of therapeutic research:
after the genetic code had been deciphered more than 30 years
ago the protein code has remained the missing link of biological
communication.11 Selective targeting and intercepting pathological
communication will now lead to therapeutic breakthroughs in the
control of cancer, infectious diseases and many other areas of
medicine. While these discoveries are gratifying small steps for
an individual scientist, they could become giant steps in the
service of humanity.
References
1. Rath M. (1993) Eradicating heart disease. San Francisco.
This book has now been replaced by "Why Animals Don’t
Get Heart Attacks – But People Do!"
2. Rath, M., Pauling, L. (1992) A unified theory
of human cardiovascular disease leading the way to the abolition
of this disease as a cause for human mortality. Journal of Orthomolecular
Medicine 7: 5-15.7.
3. Rath M. (1992) Solution to the puzzle of human
evolution. Journal of Orthomolecular Medicine 7: 73-80.
4. Rath M. (1992) Reducing the risk for cardiovascular
disease with nutritional supplements. Journal of Orthomolecular
Medicine 7: 153-162.
5. Rath M and Pauling L. (1991) Solution to the
puzzle of human cardiovascular disease: Its primary cause is ascorbate
deficiency, leading to the deposition of lipoprotein(a) and fibrinogen/fibrin
in the vascular wall. Journal of Orthomolecular Medicine 6: 125-134.
6. Pauling L. (1991) Case report: Lysine/ascorbate-related
amelioration of angina pectoris. Journal of Orthomolecular Medicine
6: 144-146.
7. McBeath M, Pauling L. (1993) A case history:
lysine/ascorbate-related amelioration of angina pectoris. Journal
of Orthomolecular Medicine 8: 77-78.
8. Rath M and Pauling L. (1990) Hypothesis: Lipoprotein(a)
is a surrogate for ascorbate. Proceedings of the National Academy
of Sciences USA 87: 6204-6207.
9. Rath M. (1992) Lipoprotein-a reduction by ascorbate.
Journal of Orthomolecular Medicine 7: 81-82.
10. Rath M, Niendorf A, Reblin T, Dietel M, Krebber
H-J, and Beisiegel U. (1989) Detection and quantification of lipoprotein(a)
in the arterial wall of 107 coronary bypass patients. Arteriosclerosis
9: 579-592.
11. Rath M. (1993) Discovery of new elements
of biological communication leading the way to the abolition of
infectious diseases, cancer, and other diseases as causes of human
mortality. Journal of Orthomolecular Medicine 8: 11-20.
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