There is a homeopathic called "Gold, Copper, Silver" which is supposed to be a 
longevity supplement.
PT
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Dr. Matthias Weisser 
  To: [email protected] 
  Sent: Monday, June 06, 2011 9:50 AM
  Subject: Re: CS>heart aneurysm


  Thank you PT. Blood is an important thing to learn about.
  There are crystalline properties of this that can be 
  changed somehow to improve the behaviour in the
  body. Most if not all health problems are resulting 
  from increased blood viscosity. 

  Leopold Dintenfass has interesting diagrams in his book 
  Dintenfass: "Rheology of Blood in Diagnostic and Preventive Medicine: An 
introduction to clinical haemorheology" Zusammenhang rheologischer Phänomene 
mit kardiovaskularen und bösartigen Erkrankungen.. Veränderungen der 
Blutviskosität, Abhängigkeit von Blutgruppe.. zahlreiche Grafiken und 
Ergebnistabellen..

  May be someone is interested to read this. 
  Very interesting graphics. 

  Matthias

  Am 06.06.2011 14:55, schrieb PTF: 
    Thanks for this, Matthias.
    PT
      ----- Original Message ----- 
      From: Dr. Matthias Weisser 
      To: [email protected] 
      Sent: Monday, June 06, 2011 12:24 AM
      Subject: Re: CS>heart aneurysm


      I read about that Dr. Joel Wallach knew about this:
      http://www.thewallachfiles.com/wallach.htm

      Copper deficiency - a cause of aneurysms? 

      Wallach should be given credit for drawing attention to the important 
role of copper deficiency in the pathogenesis of aneurysms. Wallach has not 
said that all aneurysms are caused by a copper deficiency. He only claims that 
aneurysms are most frequently caused by a copper deficiency, which has been 
shown in studies of many animal species (pigs, guinea pigs, rabbits, cattle, 
chicks, turkeys, etc.)[19,20]. Copper is needed for elastin synthesis, 
specifically for the oxidative deamination of lysine. Diminished deamination of 
this amino acid causes less lysine to be converted to desmosine, the 
cross-linking group of elastin[21,22]. This results in fewer cross-linkages in 
this protein, which, in return, results in less elasticity of the aorta. Copper 
deficiency in humans was considered rare but is now becoming a concern 
primarily in pregnancy. In a recent study with 20 pregnant women on 
self-selected diets, positive balance was observed  only if a copper supplement 
was consumed[23]. Copper deficiency need not be caused solely by low dietary 
copper intakes; copper deficiency may be induced by dietary components, notably 
fructose and ascorbic acid; some also consider excessive zinc as a possible 
risk factor. 

      Matthias

      Am 06.06.2011 05:09, schrieb jessie70: 
        My dad died of an aneurysm in his 70's after flying to Europe.  We 
thought his blood wasn't circulating properly from sitting for 3 days straight 
on two flights and then an all day car ride. Otherwise he did yoga and rode an 
exercise bike when he was home. Jess 
          -----Original Message-----
          From: PTF [mailto:[email protected]]
          Sent: Sunday, June 05, 2011 10:59 PM
          To: [email protected]
          Subject: Re: CS>heart aneurism


          My Dad had an aneurism.  They waited until he was in his 80s before 
it got large enough for them to do the surgery.  It was all downhill from 
there.  I have often asked why they don't do the surgery when the person is 
younger and has more reserves to heal from it.  It may be a question they want 
to ask the VA.
          PT
            ----- Original Message ----- 
            From: Dianne France 
            To: silver-list 
            Sent: Sunday, June 05, 2011 9:18 PM
            Subject: CS>heart aneurism


            I have a family member (64yr) that has been diagnosed with a heart 
aneurism.  It is fairly large but the VA won't do anything until it gets 
larger.  I wanted
            to ask if anyone is familiar with this problem and what natural 
approaches might help this condition.  I don't know what they can do for this 
condition.
            My cousin died of an aneurism of the spleen when he was 42.  I 
don't know if this runs in families.
             
            Dianne