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By John Colman
The aging process damages blood
vessels, even when conventional risk factors such as cholesterol
and blood pressure are within normal ranges.
Despite aggressive intervention
with diet, exercise, supplements, and drugs, pathological
changes still occur in the arterial wall that predispose aging
adults to vascular diseases. The encouraging news is that a
non-prescription method has been developed to address the
underlying reason why arteries become occluded as people reach
the later stages of their lives.
For the past 35 years, the
standard way to treat coronary atherosclerosis has been to
bypass the blocked arteries. Recuperation from coronary bypass
surgery can take months, and some patients are afflicted with
lifetime impairments such as memory loss, chronic inflammation,
and depression.1,2
The scientific literature reveals
that atherosclerosis is associated with high blood levels of
homocysteine, C-reactive protein, insulin, iron, low-density
lipoprotein (LDL), and triglycerides, along with low levels of
high-density lipoprotein (HDL) and testosterone. Optimizing
blood levels of these substances can dramatically reduce heart
attack and stroke risk.3-14
Prescribing a “statin” drug is
what today’s doctors typically do to prevent and treat coronary
atherosclerosis. Cholesterol and LDL, however, are only partial
players in the atherosclerosis process.
Mainstream cardiologists fail to
appreciate that coronary atherosclerosis is a sign of systemic
arterial dysfunction requiring aggressive therapy to correct.
Health-conscious adults have grown impatient with doctors who do
not translate research findings into improved therapies. More
than ever before, people are taking responsibility for the
health of their arteries by correcting as many of the known risk
factors as possible.
Anatomy of the Artery
Arteries are the blood vessels
that bear the full force of each heartbeat. Laypeople often
think of arteries as flexible tubes whose only function is to
carry blood that flows continuously throughout the body. In
reality, arteries are dynamic, functioning muscular structures
that in good health expand and contract to facilitate
circulation and maintain optimal blood pressure.
The artery’s outer layer mostly
consists of connective tissue and provides structural
containment for the two layers beneath. The middle arterial area
comprises elastic smooth muscle that provides the contractile
strength to make possible the artery’s expansion and contraction
with each heartbeat. The inner layer—known as the
endothelium—consists of a thin area of endothelial cells whose
integrity is crucial if atherosclerosis is to be prevented.
A vital function of the
endothelium is to form a barrier to prevent toxic substances in
the blood from entering the elastic smooth muscle in the middle
vessel wall. Another specialized function of the endothelium is
to react to mechanical forces such as blood pressure and blood
flow generated by the heart’s beating action. The endothelium
releases substances into cells of the middle layer smooth muscle
that changes the tone or firmness of the artery.
When endothelial cells sense an
injury, they produce signals that prompt smooth muscle cells in
the middle arterial wall to change. These changes result in the
smooth muscle cells moving toward the site of vascular injury,
where they reposition themselves just beneath the endothelial
cell layer. In reaction to injury, endothelial cells also
produce substances that signal circulating blood cells to stick
to the endothelium (instead of effortlessly flowing through the
vessel). Atherosclerosis gradually forms in response to this
initial injury to the endothelium.
Changes in the Aging Endothelium
As we grow older, some of the
specialized functions of our endothelial cells become blunted.
The self-renewal process weakens. The endothelial barrier
becomes leaky. Signals to the middle wall smooth muscle cells
that regulate their function become altered.
Smooth muscle cells behave as if
in reaction to endothelial injury, migrating to the endothelium,
where they multiply and produce matrix proteins that gradually
occlude the blood vessel. The addition of these smooth muscle
cells and matrix proteins within the sub-endothelial space
results in thickening of the artery’s inner wall. In older
arteries, the inner wall becomes a battleground where multiple
reactions occur that are similar to the process of chronic
injury. The inner wall dysfunction that occurs in the aging
artery provides fertile soil for the seeds of atherosclerosis.
All of these processes whereby normal endothelial function is
compromised are collectively referred to as
endothelial dysfunction.
How Atherosclerosis Develops
Atherosclerosis is so common in
older adults that some experts used to think it was part of
normal aging. An alternative view is that atherosclerosis is a
disease process that takes advantage of changes that occur
within the aging artery.
The vascular aging process and
atherosclerotic process influence each other and become
intertwined as we age. The more severe vascular aging is, the
easier it is for atherosclerosis to take hold. The more severe
atherosclerosis is, the greater its impact on diseases
associated with vascular aging, such as stroke and heart attack.
Thus, it appears that with advancing age, atherosclerosis and
the aging process combine forces.
An often-used analogy for
atherosclerosis is a “clogged pipe.” This misguided perception
either leads to bypass surgery or a procedure in which the
blocked coronary artery is forced opened with a balloon catheter
(angioplasty) and a stent is implanted to keep the artery open.
While these surgical procedures have become necessary for many
people, the “clogged pipe” analogy is an inaccurate way to view
the process of atherosclerosis.
Atherosclerosis begins with
changes in endothelial cell function that cause white blood
cells moving through the blood to stick to the endothelium
instead of flowing by normally. The endothelium becomes
weakened, which allows blood cells and toxic substances
circulating in the blood to pass through the endothelium and
enter the artery’s sub-endothelial compartment. Lipid or fat
cell-like substances in the blood, such as LDL and
triglycerides, then accumulate in this area.
The lipids that accumulate in the
broken endothelium become oxidized. This causes them to signal
the endothelial cells, which then alert smooth muscle cells to
begin a “repair” process that eventually results in an
atherosclerotic lesion. Depending on a person’s individual risk
factors (such as poor diet, lack of exercise, smoking, high
blood pressure, and the aging process itself), fat accumulation
continues and the atherosclerotic process accelerates.
White blood cells called
macrophages then invade the area to digest the fat. Smooth
muscle cells that have migrated to the area have already changed
their nature to also scavenge fat. These fat-laden white blood
cells and smooth muscle cells, which are called “foam cells,”
induce chronic inflammatory attack by various immune components.
Smooth muscle cells try to curtail the injury to the endothelium
by producing collagen, which forms a cap over the injury site.
Then calcium accumulates and forms a material resembling bone.
This is why atherosclerosis used to be referred to as “hardening
of the arteries.”
This complex array of foam cells,
calcification, and lipid accumulation is called an
atherosclerotic plaque. The plaque grows, and if it becomes
unstable, is vulnerable to acute rupture that exposes its
contents to the blood. Platelets can then rapidly accumulate
around this ruptured plaque, resulting in a blockage (or blood
clot) on the inner surface of the blood vessel wall. This clot
can become very large and occlude the vessel. Even small
plaques, if they rupture, can interfere with blood flow and
cause an acute heart attack.
Alternatively, atherosclerotic
plaques can enlarge to such a degree as to completely block
blood flow. When blood flow within an artery is severely
compromised by a large plaque or blood clot, the cells of
tissues that depend on blood flow from that artery become
damaged or die. Coronary atherosclerosis cuts off the heart’s
blood supply by occluding the heart’s arteries, thus stopping
the oxygen supply to the heart and causing a heart attack. A
stroke results when atherosclerosis processes cut off the oxygen
supply to a portion of the brain.
The Arterial Wall Under Attack
High blood pressure, elevated LDL
and triglycerides, low HDL, cigarette smoking, diabetes,
obesity, and lack of exercise contribute to endothelial
dysfunction and the subsequent development of atherosclerosis.15-25
Additional endothelial-damaging
factors include excess levels of glucose, insulin, iron,
homocysteine, fibrinogen, and C-reactive protein, as well as low
HDL and free testosterone (in men).3,9,10,24,26-28
Homocysteine is particularly
dangerous because it can induce the initial injury to the
endothelium. Homocysteine then facilitates oxidation of the
fat/LDL that accumulates beneath the damaged endothelium, and
finally contributes to the abnormal accumulation of blood
components around the atherosclerotic lesion.29
Fibrinogen is a clotting factor
that accumulates at the site of the endothelial lesion.
Fibrinogen may contribute to plaque buildup or participate in
blood clot-induced blockage of an artery after an unstable
atherosclerotic plaque ruptures.30
Glucose at even high-normal levels
may accelerate the glycation process that causes arterial
stiffening, while high-normal fasting insulin inflicts direct
damage to the endothelium.31-36
High levels of iron promote LDL
oxidation in the damaged endothelium, while low levels of
testosterone appear to interfere with normal endothelial
function.9,11,14
C-reactive protein is not only an
inflammatory marker, but also directly damages the endothelium.
Chronic inflammation, as evidenced by persistent high levels of
C-reactive protein, creates initial injuries to the endothelium
and also accelerates the progression of existing atherosclerotic
lesions.3,27
In response to numerous published
studies, health-conscious people are altering their diets,
taking drugs, hormones, and dietary supplements, and trying to
exercise regularly in order to reduce these atherosclerosis risk
factors. However, these efforts alone cannot be completely
successful because age itself is a major risk factor for
atherosclerosis.
Atherosclerotic risk conferred by
age is attributable in large measure to pathological endothelial
dysfunction.37,38
As noted earlier, endothelial dysfunction is not synonymous with
atherosclerosis, but the two processes are increasingly
intertwined with advancing age.
WHAT DO ENDOTHELIAL CELLS DO?
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Maintaining the endothelium’s
integrity is crucial to protecting against occlusive
atherosclerosis and helping to keep blood pressure under
control. The four primary functions of endothelial cells are
to:
-
Form a barrier to prevent
toxic substances from entering the smooth muscle in the
middle arterial wall;
-
Sense mechanical forces
(pressure and/or flow) and release substances that act to
change the “contractile tone” of the smooth muscle medial
layer;
-
Release substances into the
blood to change the function of blood platelets, making
them more or less sticky;
-
Sense arterial wall injury
and produce substances to change the nature of smooth
muscle cells in the middle layer of the artery. This
causes smooth muscle cells to migrate to the area of
endothelial injury, and signals blood cells to stick to
endothelial cells.
Poor health habits and normal
aging result in endothelial dysfunction, a pathological
process that is initiated when the endothelial boundary
lining the arteries is broken. Atherosclerotic lesions form
in response to endothelial injury. |
Maintaining Vascular Health During
Aging
Endothelial cells line the
arteries, veins, arterioles, and capillaries of the vascular
system. Twenty years ago, the endothelium was seen as a
relatively inert structure that played no active role in
vascular function. Since then, however, research has shown that
the endothelium is dynamic and participates in vital aspects of
arterial structure and function.39
Arterial blood vessel dilation
depends on endothelial cells triggering the production of a
signaling molecule called cyclic guanosine monophosphate (cyclic
GMP) in the muscle cells. Cyclic GMP prompts a change in calcium
flux at the smooth muscle cell surface, producing relaxation of
the muscle. Relaxation of the artery muscle cells allows the
artery to expand and then subsequently contract, helping to pump
blood back to the heart.40
Nitric oxide production by endothelial cells also regulates
vascular tone, changes cardiac contraction, prevents vessel
injury, and helps prevent the development of atherosclerosis.
Once atherosclerosis is present, however, endothelial cells
cannot function properly, and this blocks nitric oxide-induced
dilation, thus stiffening the arteries.
The endothelium’s ability to
manufacture enough nitric oxide to maintain artery dilation is
one of its most crucial functions. When arteries lose their
ability to respond to sudden increased demand for blood flow,
endothelial dysfunction develops. This condition is a hallmark
of cardiovascular disease.
Endothelial dysfunction is also
the earliest measurable functional abnormality of the vessel
wall. Tests of endothelial dysfunction may detect abnormalities
in the initial stages of atherosclerotic disease before clinical
symptoms are present.40,41
In subjects with coronary artery disease, hypertension, and
hypercholesteremia, endothelial dysfunction is always present.41
Furthermore, endothelial dysfunction is present in type I and
type II diabetes, and is related to the development of diabetic
vascular complications.41
Preventing
endothelial dysfunction
may be possible through
innovative nutritional strategies.
Emerging research suggests that propionyl-L-carnitine and PEAK
ATP™ may protect cardiovascular health by preventing endothelial
dysfunction, restoring healthy endothelial function, and
optimizing the energy available to cardiac and vascular cells.
PEAK ATP™ also works synergistically with propionyl-L-carnitine
to protect cardiovascular function while promoting enhanced
cellular energy for people with conditions ranging from chronic
fatigue syndrome to erectile dysfunction.42,43
Propionyl-L-Carnitine (PLC)
Research suggests that
propionyl-L-carnitine (PLC) plays an important role in
protecting the function and health of endothelial cells.44-46
Studies also indicate that PLC may act as a nutritional
corrective agent, relieving clinical symptoms of cardiovascular
conditions such as peripheral arterial disease, angina, coronary
artery disease, cardiomyopathy, intermittent claudication,
ischemic heart disease, atherosclerosis, and congestive heart
failure.47-54
PLC appears to be more potent than L-carnitine in improving
vascular function.55
PLC passes across the
mitochondrial membrane to supply L-carnitine directly to the
mitochondria, the energy-producing organelles of all cells.
Carnitines are essential for mitochondrial fatty acid transport
and energy production. This is important because heart muscle
cells and endothelial cells burn fatty acids rather than glucose
for 70% of their energy. By contrast, most cells generate 70% of
their energy from glucose and only 30% from fatty acids.56
Carnitine deficiency has been
associated with congestive heart failure.50
PLC supplementation has been reported to increase exercise
capacity, optimize energy production, and reduce ventricular
size in patients with congestive heart failure.50
The myocardium, the muscular
substance of the heart, comprises cells called cardiomyocytes. A
study of cardiomyocytes found that PLC helped to correct an
imbalance between the production and utilization of adenosine
triphosphate (ATP), the energy currency used throughout the
body. This suggests that PLC may improve cardiac performance by
improving energy metabolism and optimizing ATP levels.57
An animal study suggests PLC may
help to prevent or decrease the severity of atherosclerosis. In
rabbits fed a high-cholesterol diet, which normally induces
endothelial dysfunction and subsequent atherosclerosis,
supplementation with PLC resulted in reduced plaque thickness,
markedly lower triglyceride levels, and reduced proliferation of
foam cells, thereby preventing the progression of
atherosclerosis.53
PLC has been shown to have a
protective role against vascular cell inflammation that other
carnitines do not. When rodents were exposed to irritating
chemicals, PLC protected their vascular cells from this source
of damage, but L-carnitine and acetyl-L-carnitine did not,
leading the study authors to support “a specific protective role
of PLC in the vascular component of the inflammatory process.”45
PLC improves endothelial function
by increasing nitric oxide production in animals with normal
blood pressure and in animal models of hypertension. The
increased nitric oxide production induced by PLC is related to
its antioxidant properties; PLC reduces reactive oxygen species
and increases nitric oxide production in the endothelium in the
presence of superoxide dismutase (SOD) and catalase.58
Oxygen-deprived endothelial cells
produce large amounts of free radicals. Laboratory findings
suggest that PLC protects these cells during periods of oxygen
deprivation. When blood flow is restored, PLC also allows the
cells to regain their lost energy charge much faster.46
An animal study indicates that PLC
prevents abnormal heart muscle function associated with
diabetes. The researchers found that PLC significantly increased
both fatty acid and glucose utilization while restoring cardiac
muscle function. These findings suggest PLC prevents diminished
cardiac function associated with diabetes, possibly by promoting
a favorable shift in glucose and fatty acid metabolism.59
PLC Improves Physical Performance
Intermittent claudication is a
condition caused by narrowing of the leg arteries. Patients
typically experience pain in their calf muscles that makes
walking long distances difficult or impossible.
In a 24-week study, patients
supplemented with PLC gradually increased the distance they were
able to walk on a treadmill by up to 73%. The study authors
concluded, “The response rate during the entire titration course
was significantly in favor of [PLC] compared with placebo.
Although the precise mode of therapeutic action requires
clarification, [PLC], at a dose of 1000 mg to 2000 mg a day
appears to be effective and well tolerated, with minimal adverse
effects.”60
Several studies have shown that
PLC increases the walking capacity of patients with peripheral
arterial disease. A study comparing PLC to L-carnitine showed
that PLC increased patient walking distance from 245 to 349
meters, while carnitine was only slightly better than placebo.55
Ultrasound testing found that PLC acts through a metabolic
mechanism rather than by altering blood velocity or flow.55
Another study suggested that PLC increases muscle strength in
patients with peripheral arterial disease.54
PLC and Male Sexual Dysfunction
In a study of male sexual
dysfunction, testosterone supplementation was compared to
supplementation with a combination of oral PLC and
acetyl-L-carnitine. Both the carnitine combination and
testosterone improved the following penile functions: peak
systolic velocity, end-diastolic velocity, resistive index,
nocturnal penile tumescence, and the International Index of
Erectile Function score.
The combination of 2 grams each of
PLC and acetyl-L-carnitine daily was more effective than
testosterone at improving nocturnal penile tumescence and the
International Index of Erectile Function score, an important
measure of erectile and sexual function. PLC and
acetyl-L-carnitine thus appear to be safe, effective agents for
managing male sexual dysfunction.42
PLC and Chronic Fatigue
In a landmark study, researchers
examined carnitine’s effects on patients with chronic fatigue
syndrome. In this 24-week study, investigators followed three
groups of 30 patients who supplemented daily with 2 grams of
acetyl-L-carnitine, 2 grams of PLC, or a combination of the two.
The results were remarkable: the
clinical global impression of change after treatment improved
significantly in 59% of the patients taking acetyl-L-carnitine
and in 63% of patients taking PLC. While the main effect of
acetyl-L-carnitine was improving mental fatigue, PLC helped to
improve symptoms of general fatigue.43
Replenishing Cellular Energy
Stores
Adenosine triphosphate (ATP) is
the primary molecule used by all human cells as energy currency.
ATP is stored in the organs and red blood cells, but is
especially concentrated in the liver. A study measuring ATP
levels in human red blood cells found that people in their
seventies had about 50% less ATP than young adults in their
twenties.61
For 40 years, scientists have
worked to create an effective, orally ingested form of ATP that
is able to boost endogenous ATP levels. Five years ago, they
developed an orally administered ATP that can effectively raise
pools of ATP throughout the body.62-64
Orally administered ATP expands ATP in the liver, red blood
cells, blood plasma, and organs.
Supplemental ATP improves blood
vessel tone and relaxes blood vessel walls, increasing blood
flow to the lungs, heart, and peripheral areas without affecting
heart rate or blood pressure.62-64
ATP supplementation can also
elevate the body’s intracellular and extracellular stores of
ATP, providing increased energy and improved athletic
performance. Additionally, ATP supplementation enhances the
delivery of glucose, nutrients, and oxygen to recovering and
working muscles, while speeding the muscles’ removal of waste
products. ATP benefits muscle growth, recovery, and strength,
and lessens the perception of fatigue and exercise-associated
pain.62
Supplementing with ATP helps to restore youthful levels of ATP
in the body.62,63,65,66
Studies Confirm Benefits of PEAK
ATP™
The patented brand of ATP tested
in numerous human and animal studies—PEAK ATP™—elevates red
blood cell and plasma ATP levels, producing effects similar to
those achieved by intravenous ATP administration.62-64
Studies show that PEAK ATP™ is readily absorbed, broken down
into adenosine and organic phosphate, and incorporated in the
liver and red blood cells to raise ATP pools. PEAK ATP™ boosts
circulating ATP levels for at least six hours and should reach a
steady-state plasma level within 24 hours.62-64
When administered orally to
rabbits, ATP regulates and normalizes their cardiopulmonary
functions, increasing blood flow, reducing overall vascular
resistance, and increasing arterial oxygen pressure.65
In baboons, ATP infusions increased cerebral blood flow by
nearly 50% and boosted oxygen consumption in the brain.65
During exercise, vascular blood
flow increases due to the release of ATP into the blood.
Infusing ATP into the legs of resting subjects increases blood
flow in the thighs similar to that produced by exercise,
suggesting that exogenously administered ATP may likewise
promote increased circulation.66
Recent studies show that arterial
and vein diameter is regulated by red blood cells sensing low
blood oxygen levels. The red blood cells then release ATP, which
produces endothelial vasodilation, or widening of the arteries.
This mechanism of artery widening has been demonstrated in
studies involving various species and tissues.67,68
Thus, red blood cells use ATP to help meet local tissue oxygen
needs. Ensuring adequate red blood cell pools of ATP to help
regulate vascular tone is now seen as critical to maintaining
circulatory health.68
ATP release decreases with
advancing age, which may be a cause of age-related increases in
blood pressure. In fact, patients with primary pulmonary
hypertension have been shown to suffer from impaired ATP release
from red blood cells.69
This is also true of patients with cystic fibrosis who also
develop pulmonary hypertension.70
Adenosine, a breakdown product of
ATP, may act as an endogenous protector of the heart. Research
suggests that through various chemical processes, adenosine may
inhibit the damaging effects of ischemic heart disease and heart
failure.71
Adenosine may increase coronary blood flow and alleviate the
harmful effects of chronic heart failure.71
Adenosine is released from the
heart primarily when the heart’s oxygen supply is limited as a
result of increased oxygen consumption during exercise,
restricted blood flow due to atherosclerosis, or ischemic events
such as heart attack.71
Thus it is vitally important to maintain optimal levels of
adenosine produced by the heart and arteries internally, as well
as of adenosine supplied from external sources such as dietary
plant and animal foods.
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