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Inflammation and Systemic Stress

_http://magnesiumforlife.com/medical-application/inflammation-and-systemic-s

tress/_

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s/)

 

Mark Sircus Ac., OMD International Medical Veritas Association

_http://magnesiumforlife.com_ (http://magnesiumforlife.com/)

_http://publications.imva.info_ (http://publications.imva.info/) Email:

_director_ (director)

 

 

 

 

Inflammation and Pain Management with Magnesium

 

Inflammation plays a pivotal role in all stages

of atherosclerosis, which is the progressive

narrowing and hardening of the arteries over time.

 

 

Inflammation is the activation of the immune system in response to

infection, irritation, or injury. Characterized by an influx of white blood

cells,

redness, heat, swelling, pain, and dysfunction of the organs involved,

inflammation has different names when it appears in different parts of the

body. Most allergy and asthma sufferers are familiar with rhinitis

(inflammation of the nose), sinusitis (inflammation of the sinuses), and asthma

(inflammation of the airways), but inflammation is also behind arthritis

(inflammation of the joints), dermatitis (inflammation of the skin), and so on.

 

 

The inflammatory response can be acute or chronic.

Acute inflammation typically lasts only a few days.

This response usually promotes healing but,

if uncontrolled, may become harmful.

 

 

The primary objective of acute inflammation is to localize and eradicate

the irritant and repair the surrounding tissue but this completely changes

in chronic low-grade inflammatory states. Chronic low-grade inflammation is

one of the characteristics of the metabolic syndrome and interferes with

insulin physiology. Ignorance has prevailed over the interrelationship between

muscular lipid accumulation, chronic inflammation and insulin resistance

because the central mediating factor is magnesium. It is magnesium that

modulates cellular events involved in inflammation.

 

 

There are many factors that trigger inflammation. They are found in both

our internal and external environments and include excessive levels of the

hormone insulin (insulin resistance), emotional stress, environmental toxins

(heavy metals), free-radical damage, viral, bacterial, fungal other

pathogenic infections, obesity, overconsumption of hydrogenated oils,

periodontal

disease, radiation exposure, smoking, spirochetes such as the Borrelia

that causes Lyme disease, and certain pharmacological drugs. Problems with

insulin metabolism are a major contributor to cardiovascular disease. It

results in the inability to properly store magnesium, causing blood vessels to

constrict, elevated blood pressure, and coronary arterial spasm, all of which

can result in a heart attack.

 

 

Excess insulin causes retention of sodium, fluid retention,

elevated blood pressure and congestive heart failure.[1]

Dr. Ron Rosedale

 

 

Inflammatory reactions in the body are a valuable predictor of impending

heart attack. Dr. Robert Genko, editor of the American Academy of

Periodontal Journal, claims that persons with gingival disease (which is an

inflammatory disorder) are 27 times more likely to suffer a heart attack than

are

persons with healthy gums. An American Heart Association paper disclosed that

85% of heart attack victims had gum disease compared to 29% of healthy

similar patients.

 

 

When magnesium levels of fall researchers note a

profound increase of inflammatory cytokines

present, along with increased levels of histamine.[2]

 

 

Magnesium deficiency causes and underpins chronic inflammatory build ups.

This concept is intriguing because it suggests a fundamentally simpler way

of warding off disease. Instead of different treatments for heart disease,

Alzheimer’s and colon cancer, we apply a single, inflammation-reducing

remedy that would prevent or treat these and other deadly diseases. The key

words here are ‘prevent’ or ‘treat’ but please notice the word is not

cure.

Though magnesium is a cure for many of our ailments full treatment

protocols are recommended with magnesium chloride as the top protocol item. It

is a

protocol of basic items like magnesium, iodine, Alpha Lipoic Acid, sodium

bicarbonate, sodium thiosulfate, whole food vitamin C, natural vitamin D

from the sun, spirulina and some other important items like purified water

that will make a difference in a host of chronic diseases.

 

 

Once we understand the critical importance of

inflammation and glutathione depletion in brain diseases,

we can take steps to prevent or even reverse the damage.

Dr. David Perlmutter

 

 

Inflammation and systemic stress are central attributes of many

pathological conditions. In magnesium we have found a potent medicinal that is

effective across a wide range of pathologies. Pharmaceutical companies need

look

no further then the sea shore, which contains millions of tons of magnesium

chloride the perfect anti-inflammatory agent.

 

 

It could very well be but we most likely will not know it until we

suddenly have cardiac arrest. Researchers recognize a silent kind of

inflammation.

This type of internal inflammation has an insidious nature and is the

culprit behind diabetes and heart disease. The chronic and continuous low-level

stress that silent inflammation places on the body’s defense systems often

results in an immune-system breakdown. Magnesium deficiency is a parallel

silent insult happening at the core of our physiology. Magnesium

deficiencies feed the fires of inflammation and pain.

 

 

Epidemiologic studies have shown an inverse relationship between magnesium

in the drinking water and cardiovascular mortality[4],[5]. This

association between magnesium in drinking water and ischemic heart disease was

reconfirmed in a major review of the literature done by epidemiologists at

Johns

Hopkins University.[6] Since most heart disease is marked by various levels

of inflammation these studies were all highlighting the hidden

relationship between inflammation and magnesium deficiency.

 

 

Another reason that chronic inflammations can take

us into the hell fires of pain is that magnesium

gets depleted in conditions of inflammation.

 

 

Beyond all the common symptoms of inflammation we find the body tissues

themselves may lose their ability to recognize cells that are “self †from

those that are not, and the body may mistakenly identify its own cells as

foreign invaders. This internal programming error then continues to trigger

and retrigger immune responses, setting the stage for autoimmune diseases,

such as lupus, multiple sclerosis, and scleroderma. The result is cellular

chaos, and what is even more disturbing is that this process may be

happening year after year without our even being aware of it.

 

 

This chronic inflammatory response breaks down healthy

tissue in a misdirected attempt at repair and healing.

 

 

Doctors who specialize in rheumatoid arthritis, multiple sclerosis, lupus

and other autoimmune disorders are very familiar with what happens when the

body goes to war with itself. These diseases demonstrate a direct

inflammatory attack against healthy cells in such places as the joints, nerves

and

connective tissue.

 

 

Magnesium is central to immunocompetence and plays

a crucial role in natural and adaptive immunity.[7]

 

GRAPH

 

 

Alzheimer’s patients who were already taking

anti-inflammatory drugs for arthritis or heart disease

tend to develop the disorder later than those who weren’t.

 

 

Atherosclerosis is caused by chronic inflammation, which often begins very

early in life. The big dispute among experts is what causes the

inflammation in the first place. One theory holds that bacteria and viruses may

cause

this inflammation but clearly we know that lead, mercury, monosodium

glutamate (MSG) and fluoride and other toxic chemicals can also cause

inflammatory reactions in blood vessels.

 

 

Recent advances in the field of cardiovascular

medicine have emphasized the involvement of

inflammation in the formation of atherosclerotic plaque.

 

 

This chapter represents basic research into the nature of inflammation. It

looks beyond the pharmaceutical companies; beyond aspirin and other

multipurpose experimental drugs that block inflammation, but not without

collateral damages. Magnesium is at the heart of the inflammatory process, it is

the prime first cause when it is not present in sufficient quantities.

Increases in extracellular magnesium concentration cause a decrease in the

inflammatory response while reduction in the extracellular magnesium results in

inflammation. Inflammation causes endothelial dysfunction and activated

endothelium facilitates adhesion and migration of cancer cells.[8]

 

 

Chronically inflamed tissues continue to generate

signals that attract leukocytes from the bloodstream.

When leukocytes migrate from the bloodstream into

the tissue they amplify the inflammatory response.

 

 

Magnesium literally puts the chill on inflammation. Heart disease begins

with inflammatory chemicals that rage like a fever through your blood

vessels. Cool the heat by getting the recommended daily minimum of magnesium

suggests Medical University of South Carolina researchers. They measured blood

inflammation levels–using the C-reactive protein (CRP) test–in 3,800 men

and women and found that those who got less than 50% of the RDA (310 to 420

mg) for magnesium were almost three times as likely to have dangerously

high CRP levels as those who consumed enough. Being over age 40 and overweight

and consuming less than 50% of the RDA more than doubled the risk of blood

vessel-damaging inflammation.[9]

 

 

Chronic inflammation destabilizes cholesterol deposits in

the coronary arteries, leading to heart attacks and strokes.

 

 

A study performed by the VA Administration, published in JADA, 1998 on

10,000 US veterans, showed that most coronary heart disease started as an

endothelial infection and in most cases was caused by pathogens .Recognizing

the role of inflammation in arteriosclerosis represents a huge paradigm shift

for cardiologists. The American College of Cardiology, the American

College of Physician’s and the American Heart Association largely ignores the

involvement of inflammation in heart attacks and strokes and certainly they

ignore unresolved psycho-emotional trauma, as well as the toxic build up of

mercury which can lead to massive heart failure and sudden death even in the

healthiest athlete.

 

 

Inflammation not only further damages the artery walls, leaving

them stiffer and more prone to plaque buildup, but it also makes

any plaque that’s already there more fragile and more likely to burst.

 

 

A 2006 issue of the Journal of the American College of Nutrition an

article showing that as consumption of magnesium fell, the levels of C-reactive

protein went up. C-reactive protein, or CRP, is produced in the liver and

has emerged as a strong predictor of clinical events of cardiovascular

diseases, such as heart attacks and stroke, even in cases where cholesterol

levels may be normal. For this reason, CRP assays may become a routine part of

blood tests for determining CVD risk. CRP levels in the blood are normally

undetectable or very low; high levels are strongly associated with

inflammation.

 

 

Inflammation is the missing link to explain the

role of magnesium in many pathological conditions.

 

GRAPH

 

 

Persistent asthma is an inflammatory disease that requires

regular anti-inflammatory therapy with magnesium chloride.

 

 

This new view of inflammation is changing the way some doctors’ practice

but most cardiologists are still not ready to recommend that the general

population be screened for inflammation levels. Cardiologists don’t know it

but when in rare instances they test for serum magnesium levels they are not

measuring anything but strictly controlled magnesium levels in the blood.

There continues to be a blind spot the size of the Gulf of Mexico in

cardiologists’ perceptions. They just are not able to get to the bottom of

the infl

ammation story – which is magnesium deficiency.

 

 

Magnesium decreases swelling, and, “is effective

in the treatment of inflammatory skin diseases.[10]

 

 

Scientists at the Joslin Diabetes Center in Boston, have bred a strain of

mice whose fat cells are supercharged inflammation factories. “We can

reproduce the whole syndrome (diabetes) just by inciting inflammation,†Dr.

Steve Shoelson says. This suggests that a well-timed intervention in the

inflammatory process might reverse some if not all the effects of diabetes. Some

of the drugs that are already used to treat the disorder, like metformin,

may work because they also dampen the inflammation response. In addition,

preliminary research suggests that high CRP levels may indicate a greater risk

of diabetes.

 

 

Whatever makes us become less efficient at using insulin is

going to aid in the development of diabetes. Treatments for

diabetes work by replacing insulin, boosting its production

or helping the body make more efficient use of the hormone.

 

 

Modern medicine is just starting to admit that chronic inflammation is the

main contributing factor to heart disease and it is just about to discover

magnesium chloride as a supremely safe and effective anti inflammatory.

Magnesium chloride safely reduces inflammation and systemic stress because

magnesium deficiencies are in great part the cause of both conditions.

 

 

People with magnesium deficiency can’t properly metabolize important

fatty acids such as EPA and DHA, which are vital to heart health.

 

 

There are literally hundreds of physiological reasons to proclaim

magnesium the ultimate heart medicine; its involvement in hundreds of enzyme

reactions is just a start. Its use as an anti inflammatory makes magnesium

absolutely indispensable to not only heart patients but also to diabetics,

neurological and cancer patients as well. The treatment of chronic inflammation

has been problematic for medical science because most of their treatments

create more inflammation. Magnesium chloride does not do this.

 

 

Virtually all the components of the Metabolic Syndrome

of diabetes, high blood pressure, obesity and lipid

disorders are associated with low magnesium.

Dr. Michael R. Eades

 

 

Dr. Eades insists that theentire Metabolic Syndrome is nothing but a

manifestation of a magnesium deficiency. He says, “Why are so many people

deficient in magnesium? Because there are no single foods that contain huge

amounts of magnesium, and because there is no single food containing large

amounts, there is no magnesium lobby. Look at calcium. Thanks to the dairy

industry, we are constantly told that we need to get enough calcium, and we’re

told right where we can get it. Milk and cheese. Same with vitamin C. The

orange juice people never let us forget. Not so with magnesium, so no one

really thinks of it. Another reason that many people are magnesium deficient is

that they drink bottled water or softened water. In the old days everyone

drank well water or water from streams, both of which contain large amounts

of magnesium. Magnesium is removed when water is softened and it isn’t in

large amounts in most of the bottled waters that are available.â€

 

 

Inflammation contributes to the pro-atherogenic changes in

lipoprotein metabolism, endothelial dysfunction, thrombosis,

hypertension and explains the aggravating effect of magnesium

deficiency on the development of metabolic syndrome.

Dr. Andrzej Mazura

 

 

Dr. A. Mazur, et. al.[11] have shown in experimentally induced magnesium

deficiency in rats that after only a few days a clinical inflammatory

syndrome develops and is characterized by leukocyte (white blood cell) and

macrophage activation, release of inflammatory cytokines and excessive

production

of free radicals. “Magnesium deficiency induces a systemic stress response

by activation of neuro endocrinological pathways,†writes Dr. Mazur. “

Magnesium deficiency contributes to an exaggerated response to immune stress

and oxidative stress is the consequence of the inflammatory response,†he

continued.

 

 

Long-term air pollution exposure is associated with neuro-inflammation, an

altered innate immune response, disruption of the blood-brain barrier,

ultrafine particulate deposition, and accumulation of amyloid beta-42 and

alpha-synuclein in children and young adults.[12]

 

 

Magnesium-deficient rats develop

a generalized inflammation.[13]

Dr. Sophie Begona

 

 

It turns out that statins don’t just lower cholesterol levels; they also

reduce inflammation.The lipid hypothesis of heart disease is rapidly being

supplanted by the inflammatory hypothesis. The researchers who have spent

their careers doing cholesterol research are falling further and further into

disfavor as most scientists are showing graphs demonstrating that elevated

cholesterol in combination with an elevated C-reactive protein is a better

gauge of heart disease risk. It seems that without the inflammation

elevated cholesterol is not a threat after all.

 

 

Dr. Andrzej Mazura and team at Milan University confirmed that magnesium

modulates cellular events involved in inflammation. Experimental magnesium

deficiency in the rat induces, after only a few days, a clinical

inflammatory syndrome characterized by leukocyte and macrophage activation,

release

of inflammatory cytokines and acute phase proteins; and excessive production

of free radicals. Increase in extracellular magnesium concentration,

decreases inflammatory response while reduction in the extracellular magnesium

results in cell activation.[14], [15]

 

 

Today the most prescribed of all are drugs is used to lower “bad†LDL

cholesterol. For those who are still interested in the cholesterol connection

niacin (vitamin B-3) in high doses is as effective, much cheaper, and most

importantly, far safer then any drug.[16] Niacin also dramatically lowers

triglycerides. The New York Times said, “An effective HDL booster already

exists. It is niacin, the ordinary B vitamin. Niacin can increase HDL as much

as 35 percent when taken in high doses, usually about 2,000 milligrams per

day . . . and it has been shown to reduce serum levels of artery-clogging

triglycerides as much as 50 percent.â€[17]

 

 

Inflammation is a response from your immune system in response to an

irritant. For example, if you sprain your ankle, your immune system creates a

protein called a Circulating Immune Complex (CIC for short). The CIC travels

down to the injured ankle and causes pain and swelling. The pain you feel

is to inform you of the injury or damage. And the swelling is protective as

it prevents you from moving it and causing more irritation. This is also

your body’s way of running to the problem with fresh blood, antibodies and

vital cells in order to begin healing and repairing the damage.

 

 

Then what normally happens is our bodies produce proteolytic enzymes which

counteract the inflammation, and things return to normal. That’s why a

sprained ankle as a young child heals within a few weeks at most, but can take

six weeks or more for an adult of say 45. The problem is, after around age

25, our production of these enzymes drops off almost completely so there

is nothing to tell the body to stop the inflammation. These enzymes are also

responsible for cleaning the blood, fighting off viral and bacterial

infections and breaking down excess fibrin (scar tissue). Most if not all of

these enzymes are mediated by magnesium meaning as magnesium levels drop off

so do the activities of these crucial biological magnesium sensitive

enzymes.

 

 

Enzymes break down scar tissue and fibrosis. Fibrosis is scar tissue that

builds up in our bodies and over time creates some much restriction and

strain on our organs that they can no longer function properly. Enzymes also

clean the blood of excess fibrin that causes the blood to thicken, which sets

us up for clots, which can cause heart attack or stroke. Enzymes also help

take some of the strain off of the liver by keeping the blood clean and

not allowing it to thicken beyond normal. Enzymes are very important in

inflammation and enzymes bring us back to their fundamental supporter, which is

magnesium.

 

 

When I received the following account from my research assistant Claudia

French, who is an RN in an acute care psychiatric hospital, I realized that

we should address the issue of magnesium, inflammation and pain more

directly.

 

 

" Yesterday I witnessed one of the most amazing benefits of transdermal

magnesium I have seen. I work with another RN who is afflicted with arthritis,

especially in her hands, and frequent muscle cramping/spasms in her legs.

She has been using magnesium but became lax. Before leaving for work

yesterday I received a phone call from her begging me to please bring with me

some magnesium oil, as her hands were so cramped up and painful that she could

barely stand to continue working.

 

When I got there, her hands and fingers were very contorted in spasm. Her

fingers were curled up and stiff and her legs were cramping badly. She

reported they had been this way all day, and the pain was driving her to tears.

She immediately slathered the magnesium oil all over her hands. We were in

report and she wanted it on her hands right away so the entire nursing

staff watched and within 5 minutes you could visibly see her fingers extend

back to normal and the finger movement return. We could literally see the

relaxation taking place. It was simply amazing. Within minutes her hands were

completely relaxed and functional again and stayed that way the remainder of

the evening. She also applied the magnesium to her legs and found relief.

 

About 30 minutes after applying the oil, she held up her hands for

everyone to see, and showed us the arthritic nodules on some fingers. She

described how painful these always are to touch. But she poked and prodded

them

telling us how there was no pain now. She was able to continue working and

doing the extensive writing that is a large part of our work without any

further discomfort.

 

Pain relief and muscle relaxation for people with arthritis and muscle

cramping is an important and significant benefit of magnesium oil. The rapid

relief, visible to us all was really amazing! The following day she reported

that she’d gotten the first restful night of sleep in many days. The pain

was not waking her up. "

 

 

What is essential to remember about treating pain with magnesium is

that it treats both the symptom and the cause of pain. Meaning the

cause of the pain can often be traced back to a magnesium deficiency.

 

 

There are not too many medicinal substances or medicines that can make

this claim. It should be noted that pain management with magnesium employs

magnesium chloride applied transdermally to the skin.

 

 

Dr. Linda Rapson, who specializes in treating chronic pain, believes that

about 70 per cent of her patients who complain of muscle pain, cramps and

fatigue are showing signs of magnesium deficiency. “Virtually all of them

improve when I put them on magnesium,†says Rapson, who runs a busy Toronto

pain clinic. “It may sound too good to be true, but it’s a fact.†She’s

seen the mineral work in those with fibromyalgia, migraines and constipation.

“The scientific community should take a good hard look at this.â€[18]

 

 

Lynne Suo is one of Dr. Rapson’s patients. She had been using painkillers

and steroids for years to try to ease the pain of her arthritis and

fibromyalgia. Dr. Rapson started her on 675 units of magnesium a day. Within

days,

Suo called Dr. Rapson to report a surprising change. “I went from being in

constant pain almost throughout the day and night to having moments of

pain. And for me that was a huge improvement,†says Suo, a former college

English teacher. She dismisses suggestions that the change is a placebo effect.

“I was not one day without pain and now I don’t have to take heavy pain

medication,†she reports.

 

 

The granddaddy of all anti-inflammatory drugs is aspirin, which can cause

more serious problems than it often alleviates. Most pain and

anti-inflammatory medications are not safe; even the over the counter pain

medications

hold unforeseen dangers. Despite more than a decade’s worth of research

showing that taking too much acetaminophen can ruin the liver, the number of

severe, unintentional poisonings from the drug is on the rise, a new study

reports.[19] The drug, acetaminophen, is best known under the brand name

Tylenol. Compounds containing Tylenol include Excedrin, Midol Teen Formula,

Theraflu, Alka-Seltzer Plus Cold Medicine, and NyQuil Cold and Flu, as well as

other over-the-counter drugs and many prescription narcotics, like Vicodin

and Percocet.

 

 

People with poor quality sleep or sleep deprivation exhibit increased

levels of interleukin-6 (IL6), the chemical that causes inflammation throughout

the body. According to Dr. J. Durlach, the biological clock and magnesium

status are linked, and a balanced magnesium status is important for the

function of the mysterious pineal gland. Dr. Durlach sees the psycholeptic

sedative effects of darkness amplified by magnesium. There probably is a

strong relationship between melatonin and magnesium; certainly relative

amounts

of light and darkness affect the pineal gland and its production of

melatonin. Magnesium provides a calming effect that allows for deeper

relaxation

and better sleep. Magnesium is considered the “antistress†mineral. It is

a natural tranquilizer which functions to relax skeletal muscles as well as

the smooth muscles of blood vessels and the gastrointestinal tract.

 

 

According to the National Sleep Foundation approximately 70 million people

in the United States are affected with sleeping disorders. Approximately

12 million Americans have restless legs syndrome, a sleep and movement

disorder characterized by unpleasant (tingling, crawling, creeping and/or

pulling) feelings in the legs, which cause an urge to move in order to relieve

the symptoms. Magnesium supplements may be helpful for relieving restless leg

syndrome (RLS) and for treating insomnia.

 

 

Depression also is correlated with inflammation. A study conducted by

researchers at the Emory University School of Medicine found that psychological

stress leads to an excessive inflammatory response in people. Their

findings published in the American Journal of Psychiatry showed that

individuals

who suffer from depression are more likely develop an inflammatory response

due to the emotional disorder than people who are not depressed.[20] It

should come as no surprise that magnesium supplementation has a great effect

on depression.

 

 

In the final analysis there is no single medicine or nutritional agent

that has the power to both treat and prevent chronic inflammatory conditions.

Magnesium acts as a general cell tonic while it reduces inflammation and

systemic stress. Equally it is important in overall energy (ATP) production,

hormonal and enzyme production and function which all reflect powerfully on

the process of inflammation.

 

 

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[1] _http://www.diabeteshealth.com/read/2008/01/13/5617.html_

(http://www.diabeteshealth.com/read/2008/01/13/5617.html)

 

[2] Am J Physiol. 1992;263:R734-7

 

[3] _http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,993419-1,00.html_

(http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,993419-1,00.html)

 

[4] Comstock G: Water hardness and cardiovascular diseases. Am J Epidemiol

1979; 110:375-400

 

[5] Rubenowitz E, Axelsson G, Rylander R: Magnesium and calcium in

drinking water and death from acute myocardial infarction in women.

Epidemiology

1999; 10:31-36

 

[6] Marx A, Neutra R: Magnesium in drinking water and ischemic heart

disease. Epidemiol Rev 1997; 19:258-272

 

[7] Mag Res. 1992:5:281-93

 

[8] Magnesium and inflammation: lessons from animal models] Clin Calcium.

2005 Feb;15(2):245-8. Review. Japanese. PMID: 15692164 [PubMed - indexed

for MEDLINE

 

[9] _http://www.prevention.com/cda/article/magnesium-chills-inflammation/

9c9150d1fa803110VgnVCM10000013281eac____/health/healthy.living.centers/heart

..conditions_

(http://www.prevention.com/cda/article/magnesium-chills-%20inflammation/)

 

[10] Hautarzt. 1990;41:602-5

 

[11] Mazur A, Maier JA, Rock E, Gueux E, Nowacki W, Rayssiguier Y.

Magnesium and the inflammatory response: Potential physiopathological

implications. Arch Biochem Biophys. 2006 Apr 19; PMID: 16712775Equipe Stress

Metabolique et Micronutriments, Unite de Nutrition Humaine UMR 1019, Centre de

Recherche en Nutrition Humaine d’Auvergne, INRA, Theix, St. Genes

Champanelle,

France.Arch Biochem Biophys. 2006 Apr 19

_http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve & db=pubmed & dopt

=Abstract & list_uids=16712775 & itool=iconabstr & query_hl=2 & itool=pubmed_docsum_

 

(http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve & db=pubmed & dopt=Abstr\

act & list_uids=16712775 & itool=iconabstr & query_hl=2 & itool=pubmed_docsum)

 

[12] Calderón-Garcidueñas L et al.

Toxicol Pathol. 2008;36(2):289-310. Epub 2008 Mar 18

Instituto Nacional de Pediatría, Mexico City, Mexico.

Air pollution is a serious environmental problem. We investigated whether

residency in cities with high air pollution is associated with

neuroinflammation/neurodegeneration in healthy children and young adults who

died

suddenly. We measured mRNA cyclooxygenase-2, interleukin-1beta, and CD14 in

target brain regions from low (n = 12) or highly exposed residents (n = 35)

aged 25.1 +/- 1.5 years. Upregulation of cyclooxygenase-2, interleukin-1beta,

and CD14 in olfactory bulb, frontal cortex, substantia nigrae and vagus

nerves; disruption of the blood-brain barrier; endothelial activation,

oxidative stress, and inflammatory cell trafficking were seen in highly exposed

subjects. Amyloid beta42 (Abeta42) immunoreactivity was observed in 58.8% of

apolipoprotein E (APOE) 3/3 < 25 y, and 100% of the APOE 4 subjects,

whereas alpha-synuclein was seen in 23.5% of < 25 y subjects. Particulate

material (PM) was seen in olfactory bulb neurons, and PM < 100 nm were observed

in

intraluminal erythrocytes from lung, frontal, and trigeminal ganglia

capillaries. Exposure to air pollution causes neuroinflammation, an altered

brain innate immune response, and accumulation of Abeta42 and alpha-synuclein

starting in childhood. Exposure to air pollution should be considered a risk

factor for Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s diseases, and carriers of the APOE

4 allele could have a higher risk of developing Alzheimer’s disease if

they reside in a polluted environment.

 

PMID: 18349428

 

[13] Assessment of the relationship between hyperalgesia and peripheral

inflammation in magnesium-deficient rats. Sophie Begona, Abdelkrim Allouia,

Alain Eschaliera, André Mazurb, Yves Rayssiguierb and Claude Dubray,

Pharmacologie Fondamentale et Clinique de la Douleur, Laboratoire de

Pharmacologie

Médicale, Faculté de Médecine, France

 

[14] Magnesium and the inflammatory response: Potential physiopathological

implications. Andrzej Mazura, Jeanette A.M. Maierb, Edmond Rocka, Elyett

Gueuxa, Wojciech Nowackic and Yves Rayssiguiera. University of Milan,

Department of Preclinical Sciences, Milan, Italy

 

[15] Magnesium and inflammation: lessons from animal models]

Clin Calcium. 2005 Feb;15(2):245-8. Review. Japanese.

PMID: 15692164 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE

 

[16] Alderman JD, Pasternak RC, Sacks FM, Smith HS, Monrad ES, Grossman W.

Effect of a modified, well-tolerated niacin regimen on serum total

cholesterol, high density lipoprotein cholesterol and the cholesterol to high

density lipoprotein ratio. Am J Cardiol. 1989 Oct 1;64(12):725-9.

 

[17] Orthomolecular Medicine News Service, August 11, 2008 Way Too Many

Prescriptions

 

 

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(http://magnesiumforlife.com/medical-application/inflammation-and-systemic-stres\

s/#_ednref19)

_http://www.nytimes.com/2005/11/29/health/29cons.html?ei=5088 & en=

dcdd26e735aa717b & ex=1290920400 & partner=rssnyt & emc=rss & pagewanted=print_

(http://www.nytimes.com/2005/11/29/health/29cons.html?ei=5088 & en=dcdd26e735aa717

b & ex=1290920400 & partner=rssnyt & emc=rss & pagewanted=print)

 

_[20]_

(http://magnesiumforlife.com/medical-application/inflammation-and-systemic-stres\

s/#_ednref20) _http://news.softpedia.com/news/Depression-

Causes-Excessive-Body-Inflammation-34499.shtml_

(http://news.softpedia.com/news/Depression-Causes-Excessive-Body-Inflammation-34\

499.shtml)

 

 

 

 

 

 

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