Interesting link to the Polio website Ray, thanks.
The minerals calcium and magnesium (potassium) all share a very strong bond. And calcium should already be plentiful enough in our diets. However, too much calcium without proper magnesium levels can help promote inflammation.
Of course, vitamin K2 (as menaquinone 7, or MK-7) keeps that calcium out of the arteries, and mainly in the bone -- where it belongs. In other words, warfin-induced medial elastocalcinosis could actually be completely reversed by supplementing with vitamin K, but especially K2. Shouldn't be too hard to find the relevant studies. Therefore, taken in synergy: magnesium, calcium, vitamin D3 and K1/K2, are all share a complimentary relationship with one another.
This is all fundamental science, to the point where the prospect of any alternatives is nauseating. Some even deleterious. We're talking about the very worst of current medical science. I'm almost afraid to dig deeper. We can jump up and down sore singing the praises of preventative supplementation, and the most elemental magnesium, or even hyaluronic acid. Either supplement is found in almost any natural health food store, and would cost several dollars a year. Although those tiny dollars aren't what helps to pad the pockets. What a sham-e.
Again, I hope at least one person who hasn't been gobbled whole by a firmly entrenched medical science -- with their rat poison, statins, artificial stents, and pig valves -- takes a longer look at the information contained in my post.
http://www.spacedoc.net/board/viewtopic.php?t=1271
I believe the truth should always speak for itself. But yeah, sometimes you just have to do the hard sell. The main difference is most doctors don’t like to be questioned. Whereas, I ask that almost everything written here by me undergoes a rigorous verification process by those educated patients among us. Take control and responsibility of your own health. Afterall, if you're reading this forum you've already begun to question medical authority.
And if you're still confused by the prospect of natural medicine, and I don't blame you, then you could always consult someone who practices Naturopathic medicine. A naturopath would test for the correct imbalances, and allow for the best of medicine and that of natural science to be sorted out and work together. Again, there are just as many bad naturopaths as there are good doctors.
Of course, this message goes well beyond the original question, and is directed more at those generally suffering from heart disease.