The Chinese Solar Machine Layer by Layer Fire in the Library The Mystery Behind Anesthesia
Watching cholesterol: Researchers have designed a new imaging molecule detectable by MRI that can highlight cholesterol buildup in blood vessels. The molecule mimics the shape of high-density lipoprotein (HDL) and is composed of an outer phospholipid layer (orange, blue, and red dots) surrounding a layer of peptides (spirals).
Courtesy of David Cormode
Scientists have found a new way to detect signs of heart disease by looking inside blood vessels.
Researchers have developed a new medical imaging marker designed to specifically target and illuminate areas of cholesterol buildup. The marker provides clear images of cholesterol plaques from within blood vessels and could one day help prevent heart attacks and other cardiac events.
"None of the technology we have looks directly at what's happening in vessels, and two-thirds of heart attacks occur in vessels," says Zahi Fayad, a professor of medicine and radiology at Mount Sinai who led the research.
Today, cardiologists use a variety of tools to examine the heart. MRI and CT scans provide noninvasive images of the extent of plaque buildup in blood vessels, although they can't distinguish the most problematic types of plaques. But cardiologists lack a noninvasive way to get a detailed picture of plaque.
"The real danger of heart attacks comes from the rupture of unstable plaque, not necessarily thick plaque," says David Cormode, a postdoctoral researcher at Mount Sinai who helped design the contrast agent. "Unstable plaques are extremely thin and difficult to image in detail."
Directly labeling the plaque inside blood vessels with a marker that can be detected by MRI, known as a contrast agent, could provide a better picture. But getting these molecules across the vessel lining has been a challenge. New research shows that contrast agents that mimic a natural molecule--high-density lipoprotein (HDL), or "good" cholesterol--could do the trick. Normally, HDL passes through arteries and attaches to low-density lipoprotein (LDL), or "bad" cholesterol, carrying it out of arteries to the liver.
Fayad and his colleagues designed a synthetic version of HDL and added gadolinium, a standard chemical that is detectable by MRI. They injected the labeling molecule into the tail veins of mice with and without cholesterol buildup. After 24 hours, they observed a 79 percent increase in the detection of cholesterol in mice with plaque buildup compared with images taken the day before, according to research presented at the national meeting of the American Chemical Society last month. Areas with greater plaque buildup appeared brighter. The researchers saw no change in mouse controls.
"It's like a smart bomb that goes directly to the plaque," says Fayad. "We were able to see plaque in high contrast."
In their images, the team also detected accumulations of macrophages--killer cells that invade areas of injury or inflammation such as plaque buildup. These macrophages secrete enzymes that Fayad says "eat up" plaque, making it unstable and more likely to rupture, which in turn could lead to heart attacks. Being able to detect these cells early on could help identify people at high risk of heart disease, as well as help develop treatments and lifestyle changes before their condition worsens.
Next, the team plans to test the HDL-based contrast agent on rabbits and pigs. Before they test on humans, Fayad says they will have to test where the agent travels in the body, as well as any toxic potential it may have.
"It is a significant step forward, but many questions remain," says Thomas Grist, professor of magnetic resonance imaging at the University of Wisconsin-Madison School of Medicine. For example, it's not yet clear if the molecule specifically labels unstable plaques, he says. Further studies comparing mice with stable versus unstable plaque may help confirm the group's initial findings.
Cormode anticipates that the technique will be available for clinical use in the next five years. "We have many people die of heart attacks per day," he says. "And we really need some additional diagnostic information to reduce the level of death we've seen from this."
Manufacturing in the United States is in trouble. That's bad news not just for the country's economy but for the future of innovation.
TomTom
29 Comments
Cholesterol is a sham!
Have you ever know a person with high cholesterol to have an artery in an arm or leg get plugged, and get gangrene and have the limb amputated? How come you don't know anyone who has their fingernails fall off from lack of blood flow? Why doesn't cholesterol block the capillaries?
High cholesterol is a marker for heart artery damage, due to low vitamin C. In the old days, sailors who had scurvy, who have arteries split open. That's just what is happening with heart disease patients. They have chronic scurvy, instead of acute scurvy.
Why was there no heart disease in Europe or the US in 1900? There wasn't even an insurance code for it until 1930. Read Paul Dudley White's book, Heart Disease, copyright 1931, to get the real scoop. Remember, he was Eisenhower's doctor when he had his heart attack.
In the 1943 edition of the book, he said:
"…when I graduated from medical school in 1911, I had never heard of coronary thrombosis, which is one of the chief threats to life in the United States and Canada today."
Reply
ncuster
1 Comment
Re: Cholesterol is a sham!
The reason it wasn't heard of back then was because the average life span was only 47, long before many men could develop problems from coronary artery disease. Also, the science wasn't developed enough to diagnose such a condition. They would just say the person died of a "heart attack" without looking at the underlying condition. If it is a "sham", then what is it that these scientists are imaging?
Reply
cuzzani
2 Comments
Re: Cholesterol is a sham!
The reason the heart, brain and kidneys may have infarcts is due to the anatomy of blood vessels in these organs, they are "terminal arteries, where an artery feeds an area and is not supply by other arteries. Therefore the closure of an artery in teh heaqrt leads to ischemia and infarction. My father was a physician and he spent many years in a pathology lab. He told me that when they were inspecting aortas in the 40's they would see cholesterol plaques in most of the cases. Cholesterol buildup start early in life and there is a paper on Vietnam soldiers that died during the war that showed them having cholesterol plaques as early as 20 years old. The build up is not only due to accumulation of cholesterol but also to a concomitant inflammatory process in the arteries. In Chu's paper the association of white blood cells to the atheroma indicates an ongoing inflammatory process that is also present in patients with stroke and heart disease. So Cholesterol may be one piece of the puzzle but it is there associated to heart disease and lowering it decreases the risk, giving a scientific evidence in its favour.
Reply
Guest (rhapsodyinglue)
Re: Cholesterol is a sham!
It seems like many in the medical community are migrating to the view that various inflammatory processes such as insulin and homocysteine may be important links in a chain of reactions leading to heart disease. From a personal standpoint it would seem prudent to err on the healthy side of all of these potential co-factors... strive for low LDL, high HDL, blood sugar control, low homocysteine and find something fun to do that gets you off the couch.
As for scurvy being a cause, I've known people that have consumed enough vitamin C to kill a horse and still had heart attacks.
Reply
TomTom
29 Comments
Re: Cholesterol is a sham!
Then why don't horses get heart attacks, or cows, or foxes, or dogs. Because they make vitamin C in their livers or kidneys.
Reply
Guest (rhapsodyinglue)
Re: Cholesterol is a sham!
There have been long term studies of the use of vitamin C supplements. Even at very high levels which I'm sure puts serum levels of vitamin C higher than that found in dogs and horses, there is no evidence of reducing arterial disease.
Out of all the physiological differences between humans and these other animals, why would you pick vitamin C differences as being the cause of arterial disease?
In addition to the studies of vitamin C, there are also population studies on heart disease, none of which implicate C deficiency. There is a rare group in Italy with a genetic variant that alters the ratio of HDL to LDL cholesterol that basically makes them immune to arterial disease... no extra orange juice in the equation.
Reply
TomTom
29 Comments
Re: Cholesterol is a sham!
My stepmother was an MD also, and she railed about cholesterol as a cause. Why is it that the liver makes cholesterol and then decides you need to die of heart disease? I don't deny that there is high cholesterol in heart disease patients, but it is a marker, not the cause. The reason that the cholesterol forms is to stop the vessel from leaking blood into the chest. That would be a bad thing.
Reply
TomTom
29 Comments
Re: Cholesterol is a sham!
Sorry, you don't know what you are talking about. The average might have been 47, but 1/5 of kids died before age 2. If 1/5 died before a 2, and the average life was 47, then 1/5 must have lived beyond 90.
According to insurance records, men aged 60 had a longer life expectancy in 1850 than they did in 1950.
Just do some research and you will find out that much of what doctors say is bogus. That is because they are trained, not educated.
Reply
brunascle
65 Comments
Re: Cholesterol is a sham!
"If 1/5 died before a 2, and the average life was 47, then 1/5 must have lived beyond 90."
no, if the other 4/5ths averaged out to 60 then the total average would be around 47.
Reply
Guest (rhapsodyinglue)
Re: Cholesterol is a sham!
If 1 of 5 died shortly after birth and the other 4 each lived to precisely 58.75 years old you would get the same average of 47... so it certainly doesn't mean there would have to be any 90 year olds. Of course it also doesn't mean there were not a lot of 90 year olds. That's just the limatation of discussing an overly simplified metric such as a mean.
Strange, I know a lot of well educated doctors, but I've yet found one that would fetch or roll over on command.
Reply
jm
1 Comment
Re: Cholesterol is a sham!
As a person doing research on removing plaque from arteries by atherectomy procedures, it would seem current problems related to cholesterol or plaque in arteries are related to the food we eat. Over time when things such as partially hydrogenated oils replaced healthier ingredients more medical problems developed. The human body can't process the partially hydrogenated oils nearly as well and partially hydrogenated oils also limit the body's ability to process cholesterol.
Reply
alanmagill
1 Comment
Re: Cholesterol is a sham!
Dear JM,
One of our companies, intelligentclothing.com
is developing a new technology to target paramagnetised nanocarriers attached to agents to remove sclerosis using a novel magnetic manipluation means. Would you like to be involved with us in detirmining which bio-chemical agents we should work with or are you otherwise exclusively occupied. Kind regards
Alan Magill, Chairman
Reply
hughhai
1 Comment
Re: Cholesterol is a sham!
This discussion is missing some important ingredients: latitude and objectivity. Historical comparison is irrelevant because we are living in an unprecedented age of processed and modified foods. Hydrogenated oils didn't even exist 100 years ago. We are eating a diet with which there is no comparison. There is no magic bullet or singular cause for heart disease, and I know first hand. I had heart surgery for clogged arteries at 36. Prior to that, I led an extremely active lifestyle and ate very little of the foods attributed to high cholesterol. But, my body is really great at producing it, and my arteries are really adept at accumulating it. The most intriguing research I have found to date is about an acid in diary products that roughens artery walls, creating sites upon which choletserol can stick and inflammation that exacerbates that process. After all, high cholesterol in the bloodstream isn't a problem unless it is forming clogs and denying oxygen to vital organs. And, yes clogs do occur elsewhere, but the vascular system allows for alternate routes and they go mostly unnoticed. It's called peripheral artery disease.
Reply