Moderator: ofonorow
ofonorow wrote:
In any event, on Super-K, my wife and I have zero calcium as measured by the "Fast CT Scan" test.
Frodo wrote:Which form of vitamin K is best for cardiovascular disease?
Owen, you never mentioned from how high a CAC score your and your wife reduced after using LEF Super K for 1 year. If it was never tested before (as I have to assume since you never mentioned) your annectotal evidence can't be taken in support of the effectiveness of this product. Some people even in old age with bad life style habits show up with a zero score sometimes. So in your and your wife case the use of Pauling's therapy for years before that CAC score alone is much more likely to have prevented any, than the vitamin K.
Decker had a fast CT-SCan after several years taking his own Heart Technology. A friend had invented a new type of fast CT-scan and offered to "test" how well Decker's Heart Technology product was working. Decker eagerly took the test, and was shocked by an ultra high calcium score. Shaken, he immediately checked himself into a hospital for an angiogram. The cardiologist told him that his arteries were clear and wide open! No blockages - even with the shockingly high Fast-CT score.
ofonorow wrote:..that vitamin C and lysine alone will not affect calcium at least in certain individuals, even on a very high PT dose.
ofonorow wrote:very high calcium scores, until he added vitamin K (150 micrograms) to his regimen.
ofonorow wrote:As far as my wife and I, I was simply reporting. We are happy, and several things make us believe it is the vitamin K that has kept are arteries calcium free. The Life Extension articles explaining the Japanese research, the hundreds of studies showing that Warfarin (and other vitamin K antagonist drugs) cause rapid calcification of soft tissues, the late Sydney Bush's experience with calcification in the eye (rather than easier to reverse white atheromas). And yes, the surprising experience of a 70-year-old man who had been taking large doses of vitamin C and lysine (and proline) but still had high blood pressure, and very high calcium scores, until he added vitamin K (150 micrograms) to his regimen.
johnjackson wrote:will an Lp(a) test give the same results as a calcium score test?
will an Lp(a) test give the same results as a calcium score test?
Friend of mine, 70, has A-Fib and is on some drugs for that, and a blood thinner
but he has a low Lp(a) score and Ive told him to take VIt K(from LEF)
will an Lp(a) test give the same results as a calcium score test?
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