Brooks,
Have you ever figured you might just stay quite when you think you have the answer because the answer would seem so incredible that you would not really enlighten, but merely damage your credibility?
Well, here goes anyway:
How do steroids work? They raise cholesterol levels. How do localized injected steroids work? They raise local cholesterol levels.
From page 156 of "Alzheimer's Solved" by Henry Lorin:
"Most autoimmune diseases and reheumatic disorders are actually a continuing response by the body to cell membranes that are simply falling apart. The body is continually sensing that the "insides" of cells are on the outside. There is a constant effort in progress to repair cell membranes. Medical professionals interpret this constant effort as being an autoimmune response.
What is the one class of medications that are helpful in almost every autoimmune disease? The answer is steriods, such as prednisone. How do steroids, which actually are a more powerful synthetic version of cortisol, bring about the relief of symptoms in patients with autoimmune disease? [My comment: or statin damage?] The answer always given is that steroids stabilize the membranes of various parts of cells thought to play a role in inflammation. How do steriods actually stabilize the membranes of cells? Supposedly, no one knows.
For the true answer to this question, we need only to discuss one of the major side effects of steriods, which is the raising of blood cholesterol levels. As stated in a previous section this is not an annoying side-effect of steroid therapy; it is, in fact, the actual reason behind the relief of symptoms that are brought about by using them. The increased amounts of available cholesterol molecules can be used for the repair of cell membranes. The leakage of cell contents then stops. This results in a decrease in the signs of inflammation."
My comment: What is one of the major signs of inflammation? Pain.
In another recent post I mentioned the experiment of having patients eat 35 eggs per day. Actually that was for burn victims. While he did not mention it, I think I can guarantee that what they were hoping to do was raise systemic cholesterol levels via food in order to assist the rebuilding and creation of cells which takes a lot of the most important molecule in the body, cholesterol. It failed due to the "hardwired" cholesterol/liver feedback system which cuts off absorption after a set amount. Ironically, what Pharma really needs to do is figure out ways to increase cholesterol!!
Unfortunately, these steriods actually act as HMG CoA Reductase Inhibitors!! They stop onsite cellular production of cholestrol (and also "systemic production" from the liver if the steriods travel throughout the blood stream as occurrs when taking them in pill form). This is why you cannot continue to use them without serious side effects. So where does the raised blood levels of cholestrerol come from? The steriod forces other healthy cells to liberate their own valuable supply of cholesterol molecules! And those cells can only do that for so long. BTW, what is the biggest "repository" of cholesterol in the body? That's right, the brain. So if you stay on steriods too long (particularly systemic, rather than localized injections), your brain shrinks!
Biologist