I had a cousin that was 42 when he died of an aneurysm.  It was in his spleen. 
He had been alcoholic (younger), went to AA and decided to totally straighten 
up his life.  He started following a very strict diet and juiced daily.  He was 
afraid of cholesterol and was trying to make sure he didn't have a problem 
there.  He had spent years getting his life and body back only to loose it to 
this.  

I had bought a copper supplement a while back and will be more diligent about 
taking it.  Thanks for the post.

Dianne

 
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Wayne Fugitt<mailto:[email protected]> 
  To: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> 
  Sent: Thursday, May 01, 2008 8:36 AM
  Subject: CS>Why any aneurysm exists


  At 06:11 AM 5/1/2008, you wrote:


     I had two friends who died of a ruptured aorta; now I know what happened.  
I always imagined it would have ruptured directly next to the heart.  The 
abdominal aorta is also bigger than I imagined.

    When talking to all my many friends that have heart and artery ailments of 
every kind known,'

  I tell them,

  "The biggest crime of the doctors is failing to tell you how to build strong 
blood vessels."

  Often they ask me,  "How do you build strong blood vessels ? "  

  They expect me to answer that in 25 words or less.

  Usually I tell them,   "Ask your Genius Doctor, You think he knows everything 
else".

  I have used up all my patience on the Fools that Believe The Mainstream, But 
it took a lot of years.


      Have you heard of abdominal aortic aneurysm?  Here's a diagram showing 
the aorta in the belly button area.

      
http://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/ency/imagepages/18072.htm<http://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/ency/imagepages/18072.htm>

     Interesting indeed.  I see no reason that one cannot occur anywhere.
   
  Several friends have died from an aneurysm.

  A copper deficiency caused this in 100,000 turkeys, and likely many more 
humans.

  I would think all the trace minerals are important, plus Vitamin C.