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         Atherosclerosis:     more books (100)
  1. Vascular injury and atherosclerosis (The Biochemistry of disease)
  2. Medical Management of Atherosclerosis (Clinical Guides to Medical Management) by Larosa, 1998-02-01
  3. Atherosclerosis, Large Arteries and Cardiovascular Risk (Advances in Cardiology)
  4. Atherosclerosis X by F. Peter Woodford, J. Davignon, et all 1995-03
  5. Nutrition and atherosclerosis by Louis Nelson Katz, 1958
  6. Atherosclerosis : Pathology of the Vascular Lining by Jeffrey M. Isner, 1999
  7. Eicosanoids, Apolipoproteins, Lipoprotein Particles, and Atherosclerosis (Advances in Experimental Medicine and Biology) (Vol 243)
  8. Prevention of Atherosclerosis and Hypertension Beginning in Youth by Lloyd J. Filer, Ronald M., M.D. Lauer, et all 1994-03
  9. Atherosclerosis and Heart Disease
  10. Sitosterol (Monographs on Atherosclerosis; V) by David Kritchevsky, O. J. Pollak, 1981-03
  11. Cologne Atherosclerosis Conference 2: Lipids: 2nd Cologne Atherosclerosis Conf., Cologne, May 2-4, 1984 (Agents and Actions Supplements) by Parnham, 1984-01-01
  12. Atherosclerosis (Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences)
  13. Thromboses and Atherosclerosis
  14. Atherosclerosis II: Recent Progress in Atherosclerosis Research : The Second Saratoga International Conference on Atherosclerosis in Towada (Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences) by K. T. Lee, Kogo Onodera, 1990-06

41. Unclog Your Arteries Without Surgery - Full Health Nutrition
The nutritional approach to atherosclerosis is for you if you have courage, goodwill and persistence, and are not afraid to take your health into your own
http://www.full-health.com/atherosclerosis/partone.htm
Standard Medical Approach Arterial Cleansing Formula Users' Comments Online Product Catalog ... About Us Full Health Nutrition Canada Arterial Plaque Reduction Unclog Your Arteries Without Drugs or Surgery Unclog Your Arteries Nutritionally
The nutritional approach to atherosclerosis is for you - if you have courage, good will and persistence, and are not afraid to take your health into your own hands. As opposed to surgery and/or taking multiple prescription drugs, the nutritional control of atherosclerosis is something you can do on your own - and get results. So, free yourself from negativity, pessimism or doubt - if any - and give this method serious consideration. At Full Health Nutrition Canada, we are sure that it will do as much for you as it has done for our clients and customers. If other people have benefited from the nutritional method to control atherosclerosis - you, or someone you know or hold dear, can benefit as well.
What Is Atherosclerosis?
Atherosclerosis is the most common form of arterial degenerative disease, in which fatty material, called “atheromas” or plaques, is deposited in the inner wall of your arteries, narrowing the arteries and eventually restricting the blood flow.

42. Atherosclerosis-Drug.com: Information On Drug Therapies For Atherosclerosis
Hardening of the arteries, or atherosclerosis, is the cause of more than half ofall mortality in developed countries and the leading cause of death in the US.
http://www.atherosclerosis-drug.com/
Healthcare professionals and scientists have carefully prepared this ALtruis Biomedical Network-affiliated site, intended for informational purposes only
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Hardening of the arteries, or atherosclerosis, is the cause of more than half of all mortality in developed countries and the leading cause of death in the US. When it affects the coronary arteries , it is the underlying cause of most heart attacks and a common cause of congestive heart failure and arrhythmias The pathological process begins very early with a fatty streak composed of lipid deposited in the intima of arteries. Modified macrophages known as foam cells accumulate in the plaque region. These foam cells accumulate lipids , especially oxidized low-density lipoproteins (LDL). These lipoproteins and cholesterol esters induce collagen synthesis by subintimal fibroblasts . When the lesion becomes infiltrated with fibrous material it protrudes into the lumen of the artery. The lesion itself rarely occludes the artery but rather it is blood clots that form on top of the plaque that close off the channel. Chronic lesions become calcified and the elasticity of the vessel is decreased. This hardening of the arteries causes an increase in resistance to blood flow and therefore an increase in

43. Atherothrombosis.org
A professional resource center for cardiologists, neurologists, and vascular medicine specialists that addresses evolving concepts in atherosclerosis and thrombotic events.
http://www.atherothrombosis.org
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44. Atherosclerosis - HeartCenterOnline For Patients: Heart Health Encyclopedia
American Heart Association member edited encyclopedia article on atherosclerosis.Includes signs and atherosclerosis. (Narrowing of the
http://www.heartcenteronline.com/myheartdr/common/articles.cfm?ARTID=75

45. MayoClinic
Information about atherosclerosis, coronary artery disease, diagnostic tests, treatment, risk factors and prevention.
http://www.mayoclinic.com/home?id=HQ00816

46. Logo What Can We Help You Find?
YOUR HEALTHatherosclerosis ( Hardening of the Arteries ) High blood pressurecan speed up the process of atherosclerosis. It becomes a vicious cycle.
http://www.crha-health.ab.ca/hlthconn/items/ather.htm
'Your Health' Home 'Your Health' Topics About This Site Dictionary ... Links YOUR HEALTH: Atherosclerosis
("Hardening of the Arteries") Atherosclerosis (ATH/err/oh/skler/OH/sis), commonly referred to as "hardening of the arteries," is the build up of fatty materials (plaque) on the inside of the arteries. Atherosclerosis is responsible for most cardiovascular disease. It is useful to compare atherosclerosis to what happens to a waterpipe over time. Rust and sediment from the water can begin to collect along the inside surface of the water pipe. Gradually the inside surface of the pipe, which was once smooth, becomes rough and begins to narrow. The flow of water may eventually be reduced to a thin stream and one day the waterflow may be blocked completely. Just like the water pipe, the inner walls of your arteries start out smooth so that the blood can flow through them easily. Gradually, the inner surface of your arteries can be made rough by fatty deposits or plaques and blood flow through them can become reduced. As blood passes more slowly through these rough, narrowed arteries, blood clots are more likely to form. In some cases, blood clots become so large that they block an artery completely. Narrowing, loss of elasticity or blockage of an artery can have serious effects on the part of the body that depends on that artery for a steady supply of blood. For example:

47. Artherosclerosis
An article about atherosclerosis, what it is, angina and treatments of coronary artery disease.
http://www.health4her.com/library/concerns/artheroclerosis.cfm
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48. ATHEROSCLEROSIS: 1994
atherosclerosis 1994. atherosclerosis Overview. Furthermore 12 millionpeople worldwide die of diseases associated with atherosclerosis.
http://www.ohsu.edu/som-hemonc/handouts/deloughery/atherosc.shtml
3181 SW Sam Jackson Park Road, OP28
Portland, OR 97201
fax Home Welcome News Adult Bone Marrow Transplantation ... PRINT VERSION Thomas G. DeLoughery
Associate Professor of Medicine
March 15, 1999
ATHEROSCLEROSIS: 1994 Atherosclerosis: Overview Disease due to atherosclerosis are the leading cause of death in the United States, claiming over 780,000 lives in 1992. Furthermore 12 million people worldwide die of diseases associated with atherosclerosis. It is estimated that atherosclerosis cost the economy 100 billion dollars each year. ATHEROSCLEROSIS: PLAQUE DEVELOPMENT The gradual progression of plaque growth is punctuated by rapid thrombosis formation which leads to clinical symptoms such as unstable angina, MI or stroke. Thrombus formation is initiated by episodic plaque rupture which exposes flowing blood to tissue factor inducing coagulation, and to collagen which activates platelets. Most times this thrombus is lyses but the residual thrombus is a nidus for future coagulation. Therefore atherosclerosis is a two stage process. The first is growth of the plaque which is mediated by endothelial injury and cytokines. The second is thrombotic. Studies have shown that the average size coronary lesion that leads to infarction is a 50% stenotic one. Large lesion often occlude silently, perhaps due to collateral formation.

49. Vascular Disease Foundation
Patient education regarding peripheral artery disease, including atherosclerosis or hardening of the arteries.
http://www.vdf.org/

50. Atherosclerosis Article
atherosclerosis isn'ta universal malady. By William R. Ladd, MD Directorof Nuclear Cardiology. Most strokes also are atherosclerosisrelated.
http://www.cardio.com/articles/atherosc.htm
HOME CIS Information Doctor's Biographies View On-line Articles ... Positions Available Atherosclerosis isn't a universal malady
By William R. Ladd, M.D.
Director of Nuclear Cardiology
"Oh, well," sighed the middle-aged man on the examining table. "I guess it's just a part of growing older." "It" is coronary artery disease. Given the incidence of heart disease and strokes in this country, it is easy to understand why patients think atherosclerosis the progressive narrowing of arteries from cholesterol plaque deposits is inevitable. But it isn't. If you don't have any of the five major heart risk factors smoking, a family history of heart disease, high blood cholesterol, high blood pressure or diabetes, you aren't at significant risk of developing blocked heart arteries, which account for the great majority of heart attacks. Controlling atherosclerosis would also sharply reduce the incidence of potentially deadly heartbeat irregularities called malignant arrhythmias, which are also generally a product of damage to the heart muscle from lack of blood supply due to blocked arteries. Most strokes also are atherosclerosis-related. Bluntly stated, heart-related death would be a relative novelty if people didn't give themselves atherosclerosis. Smoking, diabetes, high blood pressure and high cholesterol are all controllable, and even the genetic tendency to develop hardening of the arteries doesn't make it a doom. Detected early enough, it can be controlled, or at least treated before it becomes life- threatening.

51. HealthlinkUSA Atherosclerosis / Arteriosclerosis Links
Try it, you'll love it! AhHa. Click here for page 1 of atherosclerosis / Arteriosclerosisinformation from the HealthlinkUSA directory. Save on Drugs Here.
http://www.healthlinkusa.com/32.html

52. The Lipid Foundation Of South Africa : Www.lipidfoundation.co.za
Details about this nonprofit organization which is dedicated to patient care, teaching and research in the field of metabolic disorders, especially those causing atherosclerosis.
http://www.lipidfoundation.co.za
The Lipid Foundation of South Africa
The Lipid Foundation of South Africa is a non-profit organisation dedicated to patient care, teaching and research in the field of metabolic disorders, especially those causing atherosclerosis.
Registration No: IT 4209/98
Founder Trustees :

K J Coetzee, A C Coetzee, A Coetzee, J C Firth, J Fourie, J T Fourie, C W Friester, R J Jooste, W K vd Merwe
Foundation Management :
Dr R M Pelteret, Dr J T Botha, Prof D A Marais (Honorary)
Letters of Authority
Objectives of the Lipid Foundation
The Curriculum Vitae of Management
Research Expertise Offered on a Contractual Basis
Post-Graduate Education Out-Patient Clinical Services Contacting Us Write to Us Alliances

53. Vascular-Disease.net: Information Of Hypertension, Atherosclerosis, Aneurysm And
CardiacDisease.net atherosclerosis-Drug.com Venous.net products Clickto Visit Healthcare professionals and scientists have carefully
http://www.vascular-disease.net/
Healthcare professionals and scientists have carefully prepared this ALtruis Biomedical Network-affiliated site, intended for informational purposes only
Partners:
High Blood Presure
Atherosclerosis Aneurysms Thrombosis ... Varicose Veins
Hypertension
Hypertension, or high blood pressure, is usually a lifelong disease that causes very few symptoms until it is very advanced. Diagnosis and assessment consists of measuring recumbent, sitting, and standing blood pressures . Repeated, reproducible measurements of elevated blood pressures are indicative of hypertension. Levels that are considered hypertensive are related to age. Borderline hypertension is adults is said to be present if blood pressure is consistently measured at 140/90 to 160/95. Diastolic pressure in the range of 95-104 is considered mild hypertension while that of 105-114 are moderate and severe hypertension occurs at pressures of 115 and above. Most frequently hypertension exists as mixed systolic and diastolic hypertension. The prognosis for untreated hypertension is not good. End organ damage due to damaged blood vessels in the kidney heart , and brain lead to renal failure, coronary artery disease and stroke. Black people are at a greater risk than whites, men more so than women, and postmenopausal women are more at risk than those still under the protective effects of

54. NIH Press Release - Aggressive Cholesterol Lowering Reduces Atherosclerosis Prog
A study by National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute Aggressive shows that lowering of cholesterol in reduction of progression of atherosclerosis in their bypass grafts.
http://www.nih.gov/news/pr/jan97/nhlbi-15.htm
NATIONAL INSTITUTES OF HEALTH
National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute
EMBARGOED FOR RELEASE
Wednesday, Jan. 15, 1997
5:00 PM Eastern Time
NHLBI Communications Office
Aggressive Cholesterol Lowering Reduces Atherosclerosis
Progression in Bypass Grafts Aggressive lowering of LDL-cholesterol (to under 100 mg/dL) in patients who have had coronary artery bypass surgery results in less progression of atherosclerosis in their bypass grafts than does more moderate lowering, according to the results of a large clinical trial funded by the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute (NHLBI). The study was reported in the January 16 issue of The New England Journal of Medicine Coronary artery bypass surgery using saphenous veins (as performed in this study) is a common procedure. Like coronary arteries, vein grafts are subject to the development of atherosclerosis, a process in which arteries become blocked with accumulations of fat and cholesterol. "This study provides a definitive answer to the question of whether coronary bypass grafts respond to cholesterol lowering similarly to coronary arteries. Furthermore, it is clear from this research that the degree of LDL cholesterol lowering is a critical factor in atherosclerosis progression," said NHLBI Director Dr. Claude Lenfant. The Post Coronary Artery Bypass Graft (Post CABG) study found that bypass patients treated with higher doses of two cholesterol lowering drugs lovastatin and cholestyramine and who achieved greater reductions in their LDL cholesterol had a significantly lower average percentage of grafts per patient showing progression of atherosclerosis than patients treated with a more moderate regimen (28 percent versus 39 percent).

55. Guidant Your Heart And Circulatory System
Information on coronary artery disease including atherosclerosis, coronary heart disease, carotid artery disease and atherosclerotic plaque.
http://www.guidant.com/condition/cad/condition.shtml

Condition Compass Overview
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With normal cholesterol and no family history of heart disease, coronary artery disease was the furthest thing from his mind... more THE CONDITION
What Is Coronary Artery Disease?
The heart is a muscle that pumps oxygen-filled blood to all parts of the body. In healthy adults, the heart is usually about the size of a closed fist and pumps approximately 1,900 gallons of blood through the circulatory system every day. Blood flows out from the heart through the aorta, which is the largest artery in the body. All of the major arteries branch from the aorta and carry blood to all parts of the body. Blood vessels called "veins" return the blood to the heart. After picking up oxygen from the lungs, the blood is pumped out to the body again. The movement of blood through the heart, lungs and body is called "circulation." As the heart pumps, it produces a pulse. Counting the pulse tells us how many times the heart pumps or beats per minute. Like any other muscle, the heart needs oxygen to live and work. The coronary arteries branch off from the aorta very close to the heart and carry oxygen-rich blood along the heart's surface and into the muscle itself. There are three major coronary arteries: the Right Coronary Artery (RCA), the Left Anterior Descending (LAD), and the Circumflex (CX). These major arteries branch into smaller arteries that supply every part of the heart muscle with blood.

56. BioMed Central | Current Atherosclerosis Reports
Quick Search. Current atherosclerosis Reports. Current atherosclerosis Reports. Currentatherosclerosis Reports Volume 5, Issue 2 (March 2003). previous issue.
http://www.biomedcentral.com/curratherosclerrep/
Welcome guest user home journals A-Z journals by subject advanced search ... my BioMed Central Quick Search Current Atherosclerosis Reports BioMed Central PubMed Central PubMed Jump to article
Current Atherosclerosis Reports
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Current Atherosclerosis Reports
Volume 5, Issue 2 (March 2003)
previous issue Web Alert Web Alert
Robert Chilton MD
Current Atherosclerosis Reports March
Abstract
Full text PDF
Invited Commentaries Cardiovascular Risk in Diabetic Women
Chara Bolego PhD, Andrea Poli MD, Rodolfo Paoletti MD
Current Atherosclerosis Reports March Abstract Full text PDF PubMed ... Clinical Trials of Vitamin E in Coronary Artery Disease: Is It Time to Reconsider the Low-density Lipoprotein Oxidation Hypothesis? Jay W Heinecke MD Current Atherosclerosis Reports March Abstract Full text PDF PubMed ... Related articles Trial Report Trial Report - Coronary Heart Disease John A Farmer MD Current Atherosclerosis Reports March Abstract Full text PDF PubMed ... Related articles Reports Lipoprotein(a) and the Atherothrombotic Process: Mechanistic Insights and Clinical Implications Angelo M Scanu MD Current Atherosclerosis Reports March Abstract Full text PDF PubMed ... Cyclooxygenase-2 Inhibitors: Is There an Association with Coronary or Renal Events?

57. Thrombosis Research Institute.
A multidisciplinary organization concerned with the interrelated problems of thrombosis and atherosclerosis. Provides articles for professionals and consumers.
http://www.tri-london.ac.uk/
Thrombosis Research Institute Emmanual Kaye Building, Manresa Road,London SW3 6LR U.K. Tel: (44)20-7351-8330, Fax:(44)20-7351-8324 The TRI is a multidisciplinary organisation concerned with the interrelated problems of thrombosis and atherosclerosis. Our activities encompass drug discovery, basic scientific and clinical research with the aims of understanding the disease process, developing novel and affordable therapies whilst identifying those most at risk at an early age so as to intervene to prevent long-term disablement and early death. In this site you can find information covering all these aspects of our research in considerable detail as well as reviews on both the latest clinical treatments for thrombosis and the biochemistry of the coagulation cascade. You will also find a number of easy to understand articles for the interested lay person.You can navigate the site by means of the bar at the right of this page.

58. Atherosclerosis
atherosclerosis, or hardening of the arteries, is a very common diseaseof the major blood vessels. It is atherosclerosis. Also indexed
http://www.gnc.com/health_notes/Concern/Atherosclerosis.htm
Atherosclerosis Also indexed as: Arterial Disease, Coronary Artery Disease, Coronary Heart Disease, Hardening of the Arteries, Plaque (Arterial) Atherosclerosis, or hardening of the arteries, is a very common disease of the major blood vessels. It is characterized by fatty streaks along the vessel walls and by deposits of cholesterol and calcium. Atherosclerosis of arteries supplying the heart is called coronary artery disease. It can restrict the flow of blood to the heart, which often triggers heart attacks intermittent claudication People with elevated cholesterol levels are much more likely to have atherosclerosis than people with low cholesterol levels. Many important nutritional approaches to protecting against atherosclerosis are aimed at lowering serum cholesterol levels. People with diabetes are also at very high risk for atherosclerosis, as are people with elevated triglycerides and high homocysteine
Checklist for Atherosclerosis Rating Nutritional Supplements Herbs Tocotrienols Garlic Fish oil
Folic acid
...
Lycopene
(prevention only)
Quercetin

Resveratrol

Vitamin B12

Vitamin B6
...
Peony
(red peony root)
Rosemary

Turmeric
Reliable and relatively consistent scientific data showing a substantial health benefit.

59. British Atherosclerosis Society
THE BRITISH atherosclerosis SOCIETY. Welcome to the home page of the Britishatherosclerosis Society. International atherosclerosis Society.
http://www.britathsoc.ac.uk/

60. Learn About Bypass Surgery - Information On Coronary Heart Disease And Bypass Su
Information on coronary artery disease, or atherosclerosis, including information on risks, symptoms such as angina, and bypass surgery procedures.
http://www.learnaboutbypass.com
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