| ] Intravenous doses of a synthetic component of "good"] cholesterol reduced artery disease in just six weeks in a
 ] small study with startlingly big implications for
 ] treating the nation's No. 1 killer.
 ]
 ] "The concept is sort of liquid Drano for the coronary
 ] arteries," said Dr. Steven Nissen, a Cleveland Clinic
 ] cardiologist who led the study.
 ]
 ] Larger and longer studies need to be done to determine if
 ] the experimental treatment will translate into fewer
 ] deaths, but the early results are promising, said Dr.
 ] Daniel Rader, director of preventive cardiology at the
 ] University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine.
 ]
 ] The treatment used a laboratory-produced version of an
 ] unusually effective form of HDL, the good cholesterol
 ] that helps protect against heart disease by removing
 ] plaque, or fatty buildups, from the bloodstream.
 ]
 ] "This is clearly on the level of a breakthrough that will
 ] have far-reaching implications," pointing the way toward
 ] a rapid treatment for fatty buildups, said Dr. Bryan
 ] Brewer, chief of molecular diseases at the National
 ] Heart, Lung and Blood Institute.
 Kick ass! [Science is soooooo rad sometimes. Now, who wants to go grab some burgers and fries?;) - Nano] New treatment works like 'liquid Drano for arteries' |