|
Stopping Coronary Disease in its Tracks by Caldwell B. Esselstyn, Jr., MD
Medical evidence is mounting that a plant-based
diet, consisting of unprocessed grains, legumes
(beans, lentils and peas), vegetables and fruits,
combined with lipid-lowering drugs, can prevent,
arrest and even reverse coronary artery
disease.
One of the nation’s leading advocates of this
approach is Cleveland Clinic surgeon Caldwell
B. Esselstyn Jr., M.D. In 1985, frustrated with
what he perceived as the lack of serious effort at
preventing major illnesses such as heart disease,
Dr. Esselstyn recruited 24 patients with triple-vessel
coronary artery disease for a research
study, originally designed to last five years.
“My goal was to achieve, through plant-based
nutrition and cholesterol-lowering drugs, a
serum cholesterol level less than 150 milligrams
per deciliter (mg/dL), as is seen in cultures
where coronary artery disease is virtually
absent,” Dr. Esselstyn explains. “Research
shows that people with a total cholesterol that is
consistently below 150 mf/dL rarely have coronary
disease.” Participants were asked to avoid
oil, meat, fish, fowl and most dairy product;
eat mostly unprocessed grains, legumes, vegetables
and fruit; and consume alcohol and caffeine
only in moderation. Patients were also given
cholesterol-lowering drugs, as appropriate.
Landmark Results
According to an article in the August 1 issue
of The American Journal of Cardiology, 18
of the participants were followed for 12 years.
Although as a group the participants had a history
of 49 coronary events – increasing angina
(chest pain), heart attack or bypass surgery –
during the eight years prior to the study, all but
one had no events since the study began. The
exception is a patient who was off the study
for two years and experienced angina. He has
since resumed the study’s diet and medications,
following a bypass operation.
The six patients who did not adhere to the diet
were released from the study within the first 15
months and returned to standard care. All had
further coronary events, 13 during the 12 years
of follow-up. One patient who adhered to the
program died shortly after the five-year mark
from a cardiac arrhythmia, “probably due to
damage to the heart caused by his original massive
myocardial infarction prior to the start
of our study,” Dr. Esselstyn notes. Angiograms
taken just two months before the patient’s death
showed reversal of coronary lesions.
Prior to the study, Dr. Esselstyn’s group had
average total cholesterol levels of 237 mg/dL.
The group now averages 145 mg/dL. Low-density
lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol levels are
around 82 mg/dL. About 70% of the participants
have experienced regression of their disease,
meaning that the plaques appeared smaller
and smaller on successive angiograms.
“These results are particularly important
because they show that this therapy stops,
rather than just slows, atherosclerosis,” Dr.
Esselstyn says. “Patients become empowered
and feel that they are now in control of the disease
that was previously destroying their lives.”
Because adherence to the program was key, Dr.
Esselstyn used four rather unusual techniques
to promote patients’ compliance. He conducted
a 60-90 minute interview with each patient and
the patient’s spouse at the start of the study.
He monitored patient cholesterol and overall
progress with offi ce visits every two weeks for
the fi rst fi ve years. Patients learned the results
of their blood work by a personal phone call
from Dr. Esselstyn the night of their office
visit. And several times a year, participants and
Dr. Esselstyn gathered at one of their homes
to review treatment objectives, exchange menus
and socialize.
This and other studies are starting to convince
physicians that coronary artery disease can, in
fact, be reversed by aggressively lowering cholesterol
through a very low fat vegetarian diet
and, in many cases, lipid-lowering drugs.
Despite skepticism among medical professionals
that patients would be willing and able to stick
to this diet, Dr. Esselstyn insists that it is “scientifically and ethically imperative to inform the
public what constitutes an optimal diet.”
Of note: Dr. Esselstyn follows the same diet as
his patients. In 1985, his total cholesterol was
around 185 mg/dL. It now hovers around 110.
Caldwell B. Esselstyn, Jr., MD is a Preventive
Cardiology Consultant in the Department of
General Surgery at the Cleveland Clinic Foundation,
Cleveland, Ohio. To learn more about
Dr. Esselstyn and his work, visit his site at
http://www.HeartAttackProof.com.
|