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What To Do About Elevated Coronary Calcium

Beverly Meyer

Diet For Human Beings, Health Conditions, Podcast

Doctor holding a stethoscope is asking about elevated coronary calciumWhat to do about an elevated Coronary Calcium Score? Your doctor ordered this CT Scan to check for heart issues. What is the cause of elevated coronary calcium and what are the possible solutions?

Asking what else you can do than taking Statin drugs is a legitimate question.

A CT Heart scan gives you a Coronary Artery Calcium (CAC) score based on the amount of Calcium seen in the arterial walls of the Heart. The Score can be 0 – 400 or higher.

The higher your Coronary Calcium Score, the more Calcium is IN your arteries, and the greater the risk of Atherosclerosis – hardening of the arteries – with the potential risk for reduced blood flow or a heart attack.

There should be zero (or minimal) calcium lining your arteries.

Arterial Calcium, Heart Disease and Vitamin K2

Multiple studies in the last 15 years have suggested Vitamin K2’s use in preventing or removing calcium deposits from arteries, veins and capillaries all over the body.

Calcium deposits harden – and narrow – arteries and veins, reducing blood flow through “your pipes”. Just like water in your home pipes.

Here is one PubMed article on K2 and calcification: you’ll see more suggested on that page for heart disease and K2.

In my previous article and Primal Diet – Modern Health Podcast on Heart Disease, K2 and Calcium, I discuss the dangers of taking Calcium and Vitamin D WITHOUT taking Vitamin K2 as well. Never take D without K2.

This is THE key to understanding elevated Coronary Calcium

Dr. Weston A. Price discovered Vitamin K2 in the 1940’s, calling it Activator X. He found that Vitamins D, A and E won’t work properly without Vitamin K2. Without K2, Calcium will not enter bones, teeth, muscles and nerves where it SHOULD go, but can end up in the arteries (and in joints, gall bladder stones, and kidney stones).

Why is there Calcium in your Arteries? Smiling doctor with stethoscope holds a red rubber heart

To research this article, I searched extensively on the question: “Why is there Calcium in my arteries?”

All sites but one answered the same basic way – “we don’t know but”…calcium accumulates in the arteries and binds with Cholesterol to form dangerous plaques on artery walls. These plaques can block the artery. Or, “harden” the artery walls’. Etc. Versions of that.

The general suggestions always are: take Statin drugs to stop the Liver from making Cholesterol (which it makes to provide the base substance of many Hormones and other necessities), reduce Cholesterol in food (meat, eggs, butter), and take Blood Pressure medications.

Not a word about Calcium being there as a result of a Vitamin K2 deficiency.

What Causes Atherosclerosis if not Calcium Deposits in Arteries?

The most common explanations, along with chronic K2 deficiency (universal, as we don’t eat organ meats and animal glands as we used to) include: damage to the arterial wall from smoking and breathing other impure substances; elevated glucose levels in diabetics and pre-diabetics; or low consumption of quality Fish Oil (especially the DHA portion I prefer for my Clients) to help manage elevated LDL portion of Cholesterol.
While these factors contribute to “inflamed” arteries, a buildup of calcium in the arteries due to lack of Vitamin K2 will definitely harden the artery. As those who live in areas of hard limestone water know, limestone (calcium carbonate) will coat your plumbing pipes and reduce water flow in showers and faucets.

Cholesterol and Heart Disease

This article and Primal Diet – Modern Health Podcast offer my views and research on the question of Cholesterol still being seen as the cause of Heart Disease.

Functional Medicine Doctors and practitioners such as myself and many studies have shown this link to be marginal. Please read more about this.  What does the Science say??

Can Vitamin K2 Reduce Calcification of Arteries?

Studies from the last 15 years show that significant doses of K2 – more than the minimal found in food – may chelate (“grab on to”) calcium in the arteries and relocate it to bones, teeth, etc.

I have Clients who have lowered their Arterial Calcium Score and reduced bone spurs when taking 15 to 30 mg. (milligrams) K2 with full meals daily. I use these higher dose K2 caps for this. (A milligram is 100 x’s more than a microgram).

The amount of K2 in our top-selling Vitamin D3 Complete is 100 mcg. (micrograms) per cap. Walkabout Emu Oil provides 16 mcg. (micrograms) in 1 tsp. daily.  These amounts are fine for today’s dose of Vitamin D and/or Calcium but inadequate to help latch on to arterial calcium.

It’s encouraging that numerous studies are underway to gauge dose and methods of K2 supplementation in preventing and reversing calcification.

How Do You Get Vitamin K2?

In historic Hunter/Gatherer foods, we ate animal organs, fat and endocrine glands. Rich sources of Vitamin K2.

K2 only comes from animal sources except for a type of K2 from fermented Natto soybeans (an acquired taste).

In modern food, we get some from Pastured Eggs, Pastured Liver, and Organic aged Cheese. And we CAN convert some of the K1 in vegetables into K2 but not enough for our needs, especially if we take Vitamin D or Calcium without proper amounts of K2.

Here is how I offer it to Clients and in my Online Store:

  1. Vitamin D3 Complete: D3 + K2 + A in balanced ratio
  2. Vitamin K2 MK-7 form from OrthoMolecular
  3. High Dose MK-4 form from Klaire Labs
  4. Walkabout Emu Oil MK-4 form found in the whole unprocessed oil

Is K2 the Same as K1?

No, the two vitamins are quite different, although we can convert some K1 into K2.

K1 helps manage clotting in the blood, helping assure we don’t bleed excessively from cuts or injuries.

Is K2 Safe at Higher Doses?

Few studies have been done on high dose K2, but so far, no evidence of toxicity or side effect has ever been shown.

This 2015 study of Breast Cancer and Vitamin K2, used very high doses with therapeutic effects. There are multiple studies of this nature on the web.

CAUTION: Do not use self-treatment of high-dose K2 or any other experimental model without medical supervision.

CAUTION: Do NOT use high dose K2 if taking blood thinners such as Coumadin and Warfarin. Low dose K2 is OK, with doctor’s permission.

Conclusion: What to do About Elevated Coronary Calcium?

Study your Doctor’s treatment plan, study more about Vitamin K2, and depending on the severity of your artery blockage, decide a treatment plan together to address it.

Once you have reduced your Calcium Arterial Score with higher dose K2 (NOT TO BE USED IF ON BLOOD THINNERS) continue future Vitamin D with added, balanced K2.

MEDICAL DISCLAIMER: I am not a licensed medical doctor and cannot advise you on medical matters. However, by studying my website you may be better able to communicate with your wellness provider. If you need medical assistance, please seek support from a qualified physician. Click here to read my full disclaimer.
AFFILIATE LINKS: There are affiliate links in some of my articles, which means I may get a small commission if you decide to purchase something after clicking on the links. I only recommend products I trust or have used so I know you'll be in good hands.

Beverly Meyer recording a podcast episode

About Beverly

In practice since 1985.

Beverly Meyer is a Board-Certified Clinical Nutritionist who has been in practice since 1985. Her Primal Diet – Modern Health podcast has published over 200 episodes since 2010. In 2012 she founded The Center For Life, which is the largest natural health center in San Antonio, with 11 doctors and practitioners. Her Diet and Health Center San Antonio is also the longest serving health and wellness center in the area. Beverly has an MBA in Finance and BA in Economics, has owned and managed several businesses, including a franchising company and a large kitchen goods store.

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