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Frodo wrote:Have all people with atherosclerosis high lp(a)? Has this really never been examined? This should be easy.
pamojja wrote:Frodo wrote:Have all people with atherosclerosis high lp(a)? Has this really never been examined? This should be easy.
I'm sure if you search "Lp(a)+CVD" on google-scholar you would find some.
Frodo wrote:pamojja wrote:Frodo wrote:Have all people with atherosclerosis high lp(a)? Has this really never been examined? This should be easy.
I'm sure if you search "Lp(a)+CVD" on google-scholar you would find some.
No, I don‘t know a study. And I didn‘t find an answer to my question. Therefore I’ve asked. The answer could be only „Yes“ or „No“. Or perhaps 50%, 60% and so on...
Serum Lp(a) levels ≥ 25 mg/dL are noted in 67% of patients with rapid progression of coronary artery disease but in only 33% of patients without progression of coronary artery disease [89].
Frodo wrote:Have all people with atherosclerosis high lp(a)? Has this really never been examined? This should be easy.
Frodo wrote:pamojja
If atheriosclerosis is indeed a repair mechanism of the body in which the lp(a)-molecule is significantly involved, then the lp(a) value should be increased for all affected persons. If the value is not increased at all, the question remains why not. Are there other biological repair factors, like cholesterol, that cause deposits instead of lp(a)? I have my doubts.
Frodo wrote:The question remains whether there are people without lp(a). According to Matthias Rath not. And in my experience not either.
Frodo wrote:Therefore: Why does lp(a) increase for me if it remains low for other atheriosclerosis patients?
That was the background to my question.
I asked Matthias Rath about it.
Perhaps I only haven‘t understand it.
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