03/18/2019 22:46
_Ricko_
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Re: diet and dupuytrens - mineral deficiencies, etc.
Hi all,
I was browsing re DD and saw the mention of Reynauds too. I have a touch of DD and Reynauds, CVD... and a calcium score of 563 (zero is the best you can do. Over 400 is something to be concerned about) I've seen magnesium suggested anecdotally as a way to treat DD. I've read something about calcium may be a cause of the nodules, and I've done a ton of reading on calcium problems, hardening of the arteries (CVD), PAD, AMD, Alzheimers, etc. With all of that, there seems to be a "calcium behaving badly" commonality there (sure, I could be wrong, but I'll bet I'm not). I'm digress, but hear me out.
The Dutch at Maastricht U have been doing trials addressing bone/arterial issues with vitamin K2. They test before and after arterial flexibility. They can't cut the participants open to see their arteries, but they did with a bunch of rats, and they showed reduced calcification by giving them K2.
You might want to start googling different combinations of "dupuytren's, calcium, magnesium, K2, TNF" etc to see what turns up. You might be surprised.
Agribusiness, corn-feeding all animals, etc, has probably depleted a lot of the nutrients that used to be in food. And then there is a lot of sugar added to processed foods to make it addictive. Some think sugar is a cause of CVD (and therefore PAD, Reynauds ... and ?) rather than cholesterol. Then there are vegan proponents that say they can cure CVD via vegan diets - whole grain carbs (slow release sugar) and veggies are good, fat bad. Then there are the Weston Price folks' "activator X". They don't denigrate plant nor animal, just western, processed food.
I've concluded that processed foods aren't any good, that cutting back on meat (not eliminating, but seeking out wild-caught and grass fed animals) is good (they eat green grass/kelp, and the chloroplasts in the plants contain K1), and that dark leafy greens are the best (hint: they contain a ton of K1, which converts to K2-M4, which is involved in transporting calcium out of soft tissues (artery walls) and into bones. In other words, moving calcium to where it belongs. Maybe this pertains to DD, with some magnesium too, of course!
Anyway, that's the road I started down 1 year ago (med diet, vitamin Bs,C,D3,E, K2, magnesium, turmeric, ginger root pills), I'm not turning back, and I'm not dead yet.* Just my 2 cents, FWIW. Thank you for hearing me out. -- Rick
* My PCP is a "statin man". We don't see eye to eye on this at all. He called me a walking heart attack in front of his staff. I did not call him a f___g idiot, but based on the studies I've read (which he adamantly refused to read) I've concluded he is.
Edited 03/19/19 00:50
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