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- <blockquote>
- <span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span
- style="font-size: large"
- ><strong>Rosacea, inflammation, and aging:</strong> <strong>The inefficiency of stress</strong
- ></span></span></span>
- </blockquote>
- <blockquote>
- <span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span
- style="font-size: medium"
- ><em>Rosacea, or acne rosacea, has been defined as "vascular and follicular dilation involving the
- nose and contiguous portions of the cheeks . . ." that may involve persistent erythema with
- hyperplasia of sebaceous glands. </em><em><strong>Stedman's Medical Dictionary 23rd
- edition.</strong></em></span></span></span>
- </blockquote>
- <blockquote></blockquote>
- <blockquote>
- <span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span
- style="font-size: medium"
- >Light-skinned people, especially women between the ages of 30 and 50, sometimes develop a
- persistent redness of their cheeks and nose. It may begin as a tendency to flush excessively,
- but the blood vessels can become chronically dilated. Similar processes occur in dark-skinned
- people less frequently.</span></span></span>
- </blockquote>
- <blockquote>
- <span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span
- style="font-size: medium"
- >The eyes are sometimes involved, with redness of the exposed areas (conjuctival hyperemia). New
- blood vessels develop in the area, and the flow of blood through the affected tissue is greatly
- increased. The tissues become thickened and fibrotic, with the multiplication of fibroblasts and
- the increased deposition of collagen.</span></span></span>
- </blockquote>
- <blockquote>
- <span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span
- style="font-size: medium"
- >The cornea normally receives its oxygen from the air, and its nutrients from the aqueous humor. As
- rosacea of the eye develops, the blood vessels surrounding the cornea become increasingly
- visible, and, especially on the inner (nasal) side of the eye, the vessels tend to enlarge and
- become tortuous. Rhinophyma, or potato nose, has been described as a late development of
- rosacea.</span></span></span>
- </blockquote>
- <blockquote>
- <span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span
- style="font-size: medium"
- >Too often, the medical reaction is to give the condition a name, and to distinguish its variants as
- if they were different problems, and then to use the most direct means to eliminate the problem
- they have defined.</span></span></span>
- </blockquote>
- <blockquote>
- <span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span
- style="font-size: medium"
- >A typical attitude is that "Rosacea is an enigmatic disease with multiple exacerbations and
- remissions, and, unfortunately, treatment is directed toward symptomatic control rather than
- cure" (Randleman).</span></span></span>
- </blockquote>
- <blockquote>
- <span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span
- style="font-size: medium"
- >Lasers or other radiation, caustic chemical abrasion, surgical planing and dermal shaves, and other
- forms of surgery may be used to destroy the superficial blood vessels, and to reduce the
- enlarged nose or other irregularities. A few decades ago, when rosacea was believed to be the
- result of a local infection, antibiotics were used to treat it, and some of them, including
- tetracycline, helped. It was discovered that some antibiotics have anti-inflammatory actions,
- apart from their germicidal effects, and now it is very common to prescribe the chronic use of
- tetracycline to suppress symptoms.</span></span></span>
- </blockquote>
- <blockquote>
- <span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span
- style="font-size: medium"
- >Rosacea, and the fibrotic changes associated with it (pingueculae and pterygia in the eyes,
- rhinophyma of the nose, etc.), are much more than "cosmetic" issues, involving the skin and eye
- surface. If the invasive proliferation of blood vessels can be prevented, it's important to do
- that, because, for example, pannus/neovascularization of the cornea can seriously impair
- vision. </span></span></span>
- </blockquote>
- <blockquote>
- <span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span
- style="font-size: medium"
- >But possibly the strangest thing about the relationship of the medical profession to rosacea is
- that its essential features, invasive neovascularization and fibrotic growth, are of great
- interest when they occur elsewhere, and many physiological processes are known to regulate the
- growth of blood vessels and fibroblasts, but nearly all the attention given to rosacea and
- rhinophyma concerns control of symptoms for cosmetic effect. Rosacea is a physiological problem
- that deserves consideration in the light of all that's known about physiology and developmental
- biology.</span></span></span>
- </blockquote>
- <blockquote>
- <span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span
- style="font-size: medium"
- >The increased incidence of rosacea after the age of 30, and the fact that it occurs most commonly
- in the areas that are most exposed to sunlight (bald men sometimes develop it on the top of the
- head), indicate that aging and irritation are essential causes. Stress, irritation (such as
- produced by ultraviolet or ionizing radiation or free radicals), and aging are known to cause
- disorganized growth of fibrous and vascular tissues in various parts of the body. The occurrence
- of these processes at the surface, where the changes can be observed immediately, and without
- invasive procedures, should have aroused wide interest among those who study kidney disease,
- diabetes, and other degenerative diseases in which fibrosis and neovascularization play
- important roles.</span></span></span>
- </blockquote>
- <blockquote>
- <span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span
- style="font-size: medium"
- >A localized stress or irritation at first produces vasodilation that increases the delivery of
- blood to the tissues, allowing them to compensate for the stress by producing more energy. Some
- of the agents that produce vasodilation also reduce oxygen consumption (nitric oxide, for
- example), helping to restore a normal oxygen tension to the tissue. Hypoxia itself (produced by
- factors other than irritation) can induce vasodilation, and if prolonged sufficiently, tends to
- produce neovascularization and fibrosis. </span></span></span>
- </blockquote>
- <blockquote>
- <span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span
- style="font-size: medium"
- >Sensitivity to the harmful effects of light can be increased by some drugs and by excess porphyrins
- produced in the body (and by the porphyrin precursor, delta-amino levulinic acid), leading to
- rosacea, so those factors should be considered, but too often alcohol (which can cause porphyrin
- to increase) is blamed for rosacea and rhinophyma, without justification. There are many ways in
- which poor health can increase light sensitivity. Some types of excitation produced by
- metabolites (or by the failure of inhibitory metabolites) can produce vasodilation, involving
- the release of nitric oxide (Cardenas, et al., 2000), setting off a series of potentially
- pathological reactions, including fibrosis. The nitric oxide increases glycolysis while lowering
- energy production. The excitatory metabolite glutamate, and nitric oxide, are both inhibited by
- aspirin (Moro, et al., 2000).</span></span></span>
- </blockquote>
- <blockquote>
- <span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span
- style="font-size: medium"
- >When blood flow in skin affected by rosacea was measured, circulation was 3 or 4 times higher than
- normal (Sibenge & Gawkrodger, 1992), and oxygen tension may be increased. An inability to
- extract oxygen from the blood, or to use it to produce energy, will produce the same hyperemia
- that would be produced by a lack of oxygen. These measurements suggest that mitochondrial
- defects would be the best place to look for a general cause of rosacea.</span></span></span>
- </blockquote>
- <blockquote>
- <span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span
- style="font-size: medium"
- >When mitochondria are damaged, active cells produce increased amounts of lactic acid, even in the
- presence of adequate oxygen. Otto Warburg identified this kind of metabolism, aerobic
- glycolysis, as an essential feature of cancer, and showed that it could be produced by stress,
- ionizing radiation, carcinogenic toxins, and even by a simple oxygen deficiency. Other
- investigators around the same time showed that lactic acid produces vasodilation (for example,
- in the cornea), and more recently it has been shown to promote the development of fibrosis, and
- it has been called a "phlogogen," a promoter of inflammation. </span></span></span>
- </blockquote>
- <blockquote>
- <span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span
- style="font-size: medium"
- >Riboflavin, vitamin B2, is an essential component of the mitochondrial respiratory enzymes, and it
- is very easily destroyed by light (blue light and especially ultraviolet). When it is excited by
- high energy light, it can spread the damage to other components of the mitochondria, including
- the cytochromes and the polyunsaturated fatty acids. The other B vitamins are affected when
- riboflavin's actions are disturbed.</span></span></span>
- </blockquote>
- <blockquote>
- <span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span
- style="font-size: medium"
- >Vitamin K is also extremely light sensitive, and it interacts closely with coenzyme Q in regulating
- mitochondrial metabolism. For example, mitochondrial Complex-I, NADH-ubiquinone reductase, is
- probably the most easily damaged part of the mitochondrion, and it is protected by vitamin K.
- Vitamin E, coenzyme Q, and the polyunsaturated fatty acids are also light sensitive, and they
- are more susceptible to free radical damage when vitamin K is deficient.</span></span></span>
- </blockquote>
- <blockquote>
- <span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span
- style="font-size: medium"
- >Niacinamide, one of the B vitamins, provides energy to this mitochondrial system. Under stress and
- strong excitation, cells waste niacinamide-NADH, but niacinamide itself has a sedative
- antiexcitatory effect, and some of its actions resemble a hormone. Estrogen tends to interfere
- with the formation of niacin from tryptophan. Tryptophan, rather than forming the sedative
- niacin (pyridine carboxylic acid), can be directed toward formation of the excitatory quinolinic
- acid (pyridine dicarboxylic acid) by polyunsaturated fatty acids. Excitation must be in balance
- with a cell's energetic resources, and niacinamide can play multiple protective roles,
- decreasing excitation, increasing energy production, and stabilizing repair systems. The state
- of excitation and type of energy metabolism are crucial factors in governing cell functions and
- survival.</span></span></span>
- </blockquote>
- <blockquote>
- <span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span
- style="font-size: medium"
- >The polyunsaturated fatty acids, besides their interactions with estrogen and tryptophan
- metabolism, promote excitation and decrease energy production in several other ways. For
- example, they increase the excitatory effects of the glutamate pathways (Yu, et al., 1986;
- Nishikawa, 1994), and their breakdown products inhibit mitochondrial respiration (Humphries, et
- al., 1998; Picklo, et al., 1999; Lovell, et al., 2000).</span></span></span>
- </blockquote>
- <blockquote>
- <span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span
- style="font-size: medium"
- >The excess excitation that produces nitric oxide and lactic acid lowers the energy production of
- vascular cells, possibly enough to lower their contractile ability (Geng, et al., 1992), causing
- vasodilation. When flushing is caused by a mismatch between energy supply and energy demand,
- caffeine can decrease the vasodilation (Eikvar & Kirkebøen, 1998), but when vasodilation is
- caused more physiologically by carbon dioxide, caffeine doesn't have that effect (Meno, et al.,
- 2005). In a study in which drinking hot water or coffee was compared with drinking
- room-temperature coffee or caffeine, it was found that the hot liquids caused flushing, but cool
- coffee and caffeine didn't.</span></span></span>
- </blockquote>
- <blockquote>
- <span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span
- style="font-size: medium"
- >Caffeine increases cells' energy efficiency, and by opposing the effects of adenosine (secreted by
- cells that are stressed and energy-depleted), it can inhibit vasodilation, angioneogenesis
- (Merighi, et al., 2007; Ryzhov, et al., 2007), and fibrosis (Chan, et al., 2006). </span
- ></span></span>
- </blockquote>
- <blockquote>
- <span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span
- style="font-size: medium"
- >One nearly ubiquitous source of inappropriate excitation and energy depletion is the endotoxin,
- bacterial lipopolysaccharides absorbed from the intestine (Wang and White, 1999). That this
- ubiquitous toxin has a role in rosacea is suggested by the observation that intestinal
- stimulation, to speed transit through the bowel, immediately relieved symptoms (Kendall, 2002).
- Increased cortisol (Simon, et al., 1998) and sepsis (Levy, 2007) interfere with mitochondrial
- energy production.</span></span></span>
- </blockquote>
- <blockquote>
- <span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span
- style="font-size: medium"
- >Simple nervous blushing or flushing is usually considered harmless, and when a person is
- overheated, the reddening of the skin has the function of facilitating heat loss, to restore a
- normal temperature. But even nerve-regulated flushing can involve a distinct interference with
- mitochondrial respiration, and can stimulate the overgrowth of blood vessels. </span></span
- ></span>
- </blockquote>
- <blockquote>
- <span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span
- style="font-size: medium"
- >Cancer's respiratory defect that Warburg identified, fermentation with lactic acid production even
- in the presence of adequate oxygen, was the result of some kind of injury to the mitochondria.
- He showed that one of the injuries that could produce aerobic glycolysis was a deficiency of
- riboflavin. He observed that tumors generally were anoxic, and that cancers typically appeared
- in the midst of tissue that was atrophying, and suggested that the cancer cells' survival was
- favored by their ability to live without oxygen. This may be relevant to the observations of
- many surgeons of a small cancer embedded in the fibrous tissue of large rhinophymas that have
- been removed.</span></span></span>
- </blockquote>
- <blockquote>
- <span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span
- style="font-size: medium"
- >The relatively high incidence of rosacea among women (some studies indicate that it may be 3 times
- as common in women as in men) isn't likely to be the result of greater sun exposure, so it's
- reasonable to look for hormonal causes.</span></span></span>
- </blockquote>
- <blockquote>
- <span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span
- style="font-size: medium"
- >In old age, it's well recognized that men's estrogen level rises. But the estrogen industry has
- convinced women that their estrogen declines as they get older. It's common knowledge that aging
- rodents often go into "persistent estrus," and that their estrogen levels generally increase
- with age (Parkening, et al., 1978; Anisimov and Okulov, 1981). Several studies in women have
- shown that serum estrogen levels rise from the teens into the 40s (Musey, et al., 1987;
- Wilshire, et al., 1995; Santoro, et al., 1996).</span></span></span>
- </blockquote>
- <blockquote>
- <span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span
- style="font-size: medium"
- >Other studies show that serum and tissue estrogen concentrations are not concordant, and that some
- tissues may contain several times as much estrogen as the serum (Jefcoate, et al., 2001). Local
- irritation increases tissue estrogen content.</span></span></span>
- </blockquote>
- <blockquote>
- <span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span
- style="font-size: medium"
- >The antiestrogens, especially progesterone, begin declining in the 30s, so that the rising estrogen
- has more effect on the tissues during those years. These are the years in which the incidence of
- rosacea rises suddenly. Rosacea develops later on average in men, whose estrogen levels rise
- significantly at later ages.</span></span></span>
- </blockquote>
- <blockquote>
- <span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span
- style="font-size: medium"
- >Estrogen's most immediate effect on cells is to alter their oxidative metabolism. It promotes the
- formation of lactic acid. In the long run, it increases the nutritional requirements for the B
- vitamins, as well as for other vitamins. It also increases the formation of aminolevulinic acid,
- a precursor of porphyrin, and increases the risk of excess porphyrin increasing light
- sensitivity. Both aminolevulinic acid and excess porphyrins are toxic to mitochondria, apart
- from their photosensitizing actions. Nitric oxide, glutamate, and cortisol all tend to be
- increased by estrogen.</span></span></span>
- </blockquote>
- <blockquote>
- <span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span
- style="font-size: medium"
- >Veins and capillaries are highly sensitive to estrogen, and women are more likely than men to have
- varicose veins, spider veins, leaky capillaries, and other vascular problems besides
- rosacea. Estrogen can promote angioneogenesis by a variety of mechanisms, including nitric
- oxide (Johnson, et al., 2006). "Estrogens potentiate corticosteroid effects on the skin such as
- striae, telangiectasiae, and rosacea dermatitis" (Zaun, 1981). Early forms of oral
- contraceptives, high in estrogen, were found to increase acne rosacea more than three-fold
- (Prenen & Ledoux-Corbusier, 1971).</span></span></span>
- </blockquote>
- <blockquote>
- <span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span
- style="font-size: medium"
- >Lactic acid, produced under the influence of estrogen, nitric oxide, or other problems of energy
- formation, besides causing vasodilation, also stimulates the growth of fibroblasts. Oxygen
- deprivation, or damage to mitochondria, will increase lactic acid formation, and so it will
- immediately cause vasodilation, and if the problem is prolonged, new blood vessels will grow,
- and fibrous connective tissue will increase. Estrogen stimulates collagen synthesis, and it has
- been associated with a variety of inflammatory and fibrotic conditions (for example, Cutolo, et
- al., 2003. Payne, et al., 2006, suggest the use of the anti-estrogen, tamoxifen, to treat
- rhinophyma.)</span></span></span>
- </blockquote>
- <blockquote>
- <span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span
- style="font-size: medium"
- >The cornea normally contains more riboflavin even than the retina, which has a much higher rate of
- metabolism. When the cornea isn't able to get enough oxygen from the air for its needs (and if
- riboflavin is deficient, its need for oxygen is increased), surrounding blood vessels at first
- dilate in response to the diffusing lactic acid, to increase the blood supply to the edges of
- the cornea. If the problem is prolonged, the conjuctiva becomes chronically blood-shot,
- hyperemic, and larger more visible blood vessels grow, surrounding the cornea, or even invading
- the cornea. Many people, especially women, experienced problems of this sort from wearing
- contact lenses, especially when the lenses were made of materials very impermeable to oxygen
- (Dumbleton, et al., 2006).</span></span></span>
- </blockquote>
- <blockquote>
- <span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span
- style="font-size: medium"
- >Sunlight, and mechanical obstruction of the cornea, produce very localized effects, but those local
- effects are more likely to be harmful when there is a systemic nutritional deficiency or excess
- of estrogen. When the systemic problem is very severe, the cheeks, nose, and eyes might not be
- the first tissues to experience a functional disturbance. </span></span></span>
- </blockquote>
- <blockquote>
- <span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span
- style="font-size: medium"
- >The mitochondrial inhibition produced by the action of the parasympathetic nervous system
- (occurring in simple blushing) can occur wherever those nerves act, and blood vessels in all
- parts of the body are responsive to the acetylcholine secreted by those nerves. Sleep typically
- involves a shift of dominance in the autonomic nervous system toward the parasympathetic nerves,
- with vasodilation. Nosebleeds, especially in children, commonly occur during sleep (Jarjour
- & Jarjour, 2005: high incidence in sleep, and association with migraine). </span></span
- ></span>
- </blockquote>
- <blockquote>
- <span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span
- style="font-size: medium"
- >A 3 year-old child who had been having an average of 3 nosebleeds every day, during a nap and at
- night, for several months, also had an extreme behavior problem. He became angry and sometimes
- violent when he went a little longer than normal between meals. After an oral dose of about ten
- milligrams of riboflavin, he was able to sleep without having another recurrence of the
- nosebleeds, and his tantrums became rare. Apparently, the nerve-regulated vasodilation produced
- by sleep, combined with a riboflavin deficiency, had been enough to produce nosebleeds. The
- energy deficit resulting from a systemic riboflavin deficiency had probably been causing him to
- be abnormally sensitive to glycogen depletion, producing sudden anger. In another individual,
- the energy problem might have taken the form of a memory problem, or of a hemorrhage in the
- brain or other essential organ.</span></span></span>
- </blockquote>
- <blockquote>
- <span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span
- style="font-size: medium"
- >A 37 year old slightly alcoholic man with a bright red nose and cheeks was an amateur fiction
- writer, but he was having trouble with his memory for words, and for everyday events. Even
- conversationally, he had to struggle for relatively familiar words. On the suggestion that
- riboflavin might help his memory, by allowing his brain cells to use oxygen more efficiently, he
- had his doctor give him an intravenous injection of B vitamins. When I saw him the next day, his
- conversation was perfectly fluent, and he obviously had easy access to a good vocabulary. Just
- as noticeable was the normal color of his nose and cheeks. For a week, he had a daily injection
- of the B vitamins, and his nose color and vocabulary stayed normal. But on the weekend, after
- not having the shots for two days, his nose and cheeks were again maraschino cherry red, and his
- speech was halting, as he struggled for words. He forgot the whole episode, and neglected to
- return to the doctor for more of the vitamin injections. Ten years later, he had developed a
- medium-sized potato nose, and had his heart valves replaced. </span></span></span>
- </blockquote>
- <blockquote>
- <span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span
- style="font-size: medium"
- >His vitamin requirements were apparently abnormally high. At first, the problems resulting from
- damaged mitochondria seem mostly functional (flushing, mood, memory problems, etc.) and
- variable, but chronically disturbed functions lead to structural, anatomical changes, as
- prolonged stimulation alters tissue maintenance and growth.</span></span></span>
- </blockquote>
- <blockquote>
- <span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span
- style="font-size: medium"
- >Abram Hoffer, who had been treating schizophrenia and senile dementia with niacin, accidentally
- discovered that it cured his bleeding gums. That led to its use to treat heart disease.</span
- ></span></span>
- </blockquote>
- <blockquote>
- <span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span
- style="font-size: medium"
- >The "orthomolecular" ideas of Hoffer and Linus Pauling were developed in a context of biochemistry
- governed by genetics, molecular biology, in which the goal was to provide a chemical that was
- lacking because of a genetic defect in metabolism. Their idea of using nutrients as drugs has
- led to many unphysiological practices, in which an isolated nutrient is supposed to have a
- drug-like action, and if in isolation it doesn't act like a drug, then it should be used only
- according to the normal genetically determined nutritional requirement.</span></span></span>
- </blockquote>
- <blockquote>
- <span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span
- style="font-size: medium"
- >But in reality, nutritional requirements are strongly influenced by history and present
- circumstances. For example, when corneal mitochondria have been damaged by riboflavin
- deficiency, they have been found to subsequently require more than the normal amount of the
- vitamin to function properly. And the presence of a certain amount of one nutrient often
- increases or decreases the amount of other nutrients needed.</span></span></span>
- </blockquote>
- <blockquote>
- <span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span
- style="font-size: medium"
- >When the interactions among energy expenditure and energy production, and cellular activation and
- cellular inhibition, are taken into account, then it's clear that any particular problem is
- likely to have many causes and many factors that could contribute to a cure.</span></span></span
- >
- </blockquote>
- <blockquote>
- <span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span
- style="font-size: medium"
- >Lactate, glutamate, ammonium, nitric oxide, quinolinate, estrogen, histamine, aminolevulinate,
- porphyrin, ultraviolet light, polyunsaturated fatty acids and endotoxin contribute to excitatory
- and excitotoxic processes, vasodilation, angioneogenesis, and fibrosis. </span></span
- ></span>
- </blockquote>
- <blockquote>
- <span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span
- style="font-size: medium"
- >Carbon dioxide, glycine, GABA, saturated fatty acids (for example, Nanji, et al., 1997), vitamin K,
- coenzyme Q10, niacinamide, magnesium, red light, thyroid hormone, progesterone, testosterone,
- and pregnenolone are factors that can be increased to protect against inappropriate cellular
- excitation.</span></span></span>
- </blockquote>
- <blockquote>
- <span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span
- style="font-size: medium"
- >All of the nutritional factors that participate in mitochondrial respiration contribute to
- maintaining a balance between excessive excitation and protective inhibition. Riboflavin,
- coenzyme Q10, vitamin K, niacinamide, thiamine, and selenium are the nutrients that most
- directly relate to mitochondrial energy production. </span></span></span>
- </blockquote>
- <blockquote>
- <span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span
- style="font-size: medium"
- >Coffee is often avoided by people with rosacea, but it is a very good source of niacin and
- magnesium, and caffeine has some of the same cell-protective functions as niacinamide.</span
- ></span></span>
- </blockquote>
- <blockquote>
- <span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span
- style="font-size: medium"
- >People suffering from rosacea have been found to be more likely than average to have suffered from
- styes in childhood, to have varicose veins and spider veins, and to suffer from migraines and
- depression. </span></span></span>
- </blockquote>
- <blockquote>
- <span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span
- style="font-size: medium"
- >Hypothyroidism has been identified as a factor in all of those. Good thyroid function is necessary
- for resistance to bacterial infection, for regulation of blood sugar, neurotransmitters, and
- hormones related to mood, and for the formation of progesterone. Progesterone regulates smooth
- muscle tone, including the walls of veins, so that a deficiency allows veins to enlarge. It also
- prevents overgrowth of fibrotic tissue, and in some contexts may inhibit angioneogenesis.</span
- ></span></span>
- </blockquote>
- <blockquote>
- <span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span
- style="font-size: medium"
- >GABA itself tends to raise body temperature (Ishiwata, et al., 2005), by controlling vasodilation,
- and the factors such as progesterone which protect mitochondrial energy production are also
- thermogenic, supporting the GABA system. Flushing, both by directly causing heat loss and by
- reducing mitochondrial energy production, tends to lower body temperature.</span></span></span>
- </blockquote>
- <blockquote>
- <span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span
- style="font-size: medium"
- >The sun-damaged areas in rosacea can be directly provided with some of the protective factors by
- applying them topically. In the same way that topical lactate can cause vasodilation and
- disturbed energy metabolism (Rendl, et al., 2001), topical niacinamide, progesterone, vitamin K,
- and coenzyme Q10 can improve the metabolism and function of the local tissues. Riboflavin can
- probably be useful when applied topically, but because of its extreme sensitivity to light, it
- should usually be used only internally, unless the treated skin is covered to prevent exposure
- to light. Topically applied caffeine, even after sun exposure, can reduce local tissue damage
- (Koo, et al., 2007). Aspirin and saturated fats can also be protective when applied
- topically.</span></span></span>
- </blockquote>
- <blockquote>
- <span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span
- style="font-size: medium"
- >Some of the benefit from antibiotics probably results from the reduced endotoxin stress when
- intestinal bacteria are suppressed. However, antibiotics can kill the intestinal bacteria that
- produce vitamin K, so it's important to include that in the diet when antibiotics are
- used.</span></span></span>
- </blockquote>
- <blockquote>
- <span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span
- style="font-size: medium"
- >Some fibers, such as raw carrots, that are effective for lowering endotoxin absorption also contain
- natural antibiotics, so regular use of carrots should be balanced by occasional supplementation
- with vitamin K, or by occasionally eating liver or broccoli.</span></span></span>
- </blockquote>
- <blockquote>
- <span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span
- style="font-size: medium"
- >Abram Hoffer's research was instrumental in getting niacin recognized as a heart protective drug,
- but nearly everyone who prescribes it does so to lower blood lipids. That wasn't Hoffer's
- understanding of its function. He thought it acted directly on blood vessels to protect their
- integrity. During his studies of its effects on heart disease, he saw that it also lowered
- cancer mortality, and so began treating cancer patients with it, with considerable success, but
- there was no medical cliché that could allow the profession to follow in that
- direction. </span></span></span>
- </blockquote>
- <blockquote>
- <span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span
- style="font-size: medium"
- >The arguments I have outlined for considering rosacea to be essentially a problem of metabolic
- energy, and the mechanisms that I mention for restoring mitochondrial functions, might seem more
- complex than Hoffer's orthomolecular views. However, this approach is actually much simpler
- conceptually than any of the ideologies of drug treatment. It simply points out that certain
- excitatory factors can interfere with energy production, and that there are opposing
- "inhibitory" factors that can restore energy efficiency. Sometimes, using just one or two of the
- factors can be curative.</span></span></span>
- </blockquote>
- <blockquote>
- <span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span
- style="font-size: medium"
- >Because mitochondrial respiration is very similar in every kind of tissue, a physiological view of
- rosacea could incline us toward considering the effects of these metabolic factors in other
- organs during stress and aging--what would the analogous condition of rosacea and rhinophyma be
- in the brain, heart, liver, or kidney?</span></span></span>
- </blockquote>
- <blockquote></blockquote>
- <blockquote>
- <span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span
- style="font-size: medium"
- ><strong><h3>REFERENCES</h3></strong></span></span></span>
- </blockquote>
- <blockquote></blockquote>
- <blockquote>
- <span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span
- style="font-size: xx-medium"
- >Probl Endokrinol (Mosk), 1981 Mar-Apr, 27:2, 48-52. <strong>[Blood estradiol level and
- G2-chalone content in the vaginal mucosa in rats of different ages]</strong> Anisimov
- VN; Okulov VB "17 beta-Estradiol level was higher in the blood serum of rats aged 14 to 16
- months with regular estral cycles during all the phases as compared to that in 3- to 4-month-old
- female rats." </span></span></span>
- </blockquote>
- <blockquote>
- <span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span
- style="font-size: xx-medium"
- >Invest Ophthalmol Vis Sci. 1991 Jun;32(7):1981-5. <strong>Analysis of flavins in ocular
- tissues of the rabbit</strong>. Batey DW, Eckhert CD. Riboflavin is the precursor of flavin
- mononucleotide (FMN) and flavin adenine dinucleotide (FAD), coenzymes required for the activity
- of flavoenzymes involved in the transfer of electrons in oxidation-reduction reactions. Flavins
- are light sensitive and rapidly degrade when exposed to light in the near ultraviolet and
- visible wavelengths. Some of the byproducts of flavin photodegradation are toxic. A quantitative
- survey of flavins in rabbit ocular tissues is reported. Adult male Dutch-Belt Rabbits were fed
- purified diets containing 3, 30, or 300 mg riboflavin/kg for 1 month. A method of aqueous
- extraction and high-performance liquid chromatography with fluorescence detection was used to
- measure riboflavin, FMN, and FAD in cornea, lens cortex, lens nucleus, retina, and blood. The
- retina contained the highest flavin concentration. In all tissues, the primary flavin was FAD
- followed by FMN and riboflavin. The highest concentration of riboflavin occurred in the cornea
- followed by the retina, lens cortex, and lens nucleus. A trend toward increasing concentrations
- of riboflavin occurred in the retina and blood in response to excess dietary riboflavin, but the
- concentration changes were not statistically significant. The highest concentration of FAD and
- FMN occurred in the retina followed by the cornea and the lens cortex and nucleus. The relative
- contribution of riboflavin, FMN, and FAD to the total flavin pool was markedly different in the
- various tissues of the eye. The proportion of tissue flavins present as riboflavin decreased
- from anterior to posterior. It was highest in the cornea followed by lens and retina. The
- pattern of distribution for FMN was: cornea greater than retina greater than lens cortex and
- nucleus.</span></span></span>
- </blockquote>
- <blockquote>
- <span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span
- style="font-size: xx-medium"
- >Boll Ocul. 1955 Mar;34(3):157-70. <strong>[Clinical contribution on riboflavin deficiency of
- the eye.]</strong> [Article in Italian] Bellomio S.</span></span></span>
- </blockquote>
- <blockquote>
- <span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span
- style="font-size: xx-medium"
- >Eur J Pharmacol. 2006 Oct 10;547(1-3):184-91. <strong>Characterization of the antinociceptive
- and anti-inflammatory activities of riboflavin in different experimental models.</strong
- > Bertollo CM, Oliveira AC, Rocha LT, Costa KA, Nascimento EB Jr, Coelho MM.</span></span
- ></span>
- </blockquote>
- <blockquote>
- <span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span
- style="font-size: xx-medium"
- >Vestn Oftalmol. 1961 Nov-Dec;74:48-53. <strong>[The content of riboflavin and ascorbic acid in
- the cornea in burns of the eye.]</strong> [Article in Russian] Blinova LI, Tsypin LM,
- Sheinberg AI.</span></span></span>
- </blockquote>
- <blockquote>
- <span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span
- style="font-size: xx-medium"
- >J Neurochem. 2000 May;74(5):2041-8. <strong>Implication of glutamate in the expression of
- inducible nitric oxide synthase after oxygen and glucose deprivation in rat forebrain
- slices.</strong> Cardenas A, Moro MA, Hurtado O, Leza JC, Lorenzo P, Castrillo A,
- Bodelon OG, Bosca L, Lizasoain I.</span></span></span>
- </blockquote>
- <blockquote>
- <span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span
- style="font-size: xx-medium"
- >Br J Pharmacol. 2006 Aug;148(8):1144-55. <strong>Adenosine A(2A) receptors play a role in the
- pathogenesis of hepatic cirrhosis.</strong> Chan ES, Montesinos MC, Fernandez P, Desai
- A, Delano DL, Yee H, Reiss AB, Pillinger MH, Chen JF, Schwarzschild MA, Friedman SL, Cronstein
- BN.</span></span></span>
- </blockquote>
- <blockquote>
- <span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span
- style="font-size: xx-medium"
- >Clin Exp Rheumatol. 2003 Nov-Dec;21(6):687-90. <strong>New roles for estrogens in
- rheumatoid arthritis.</strong>Cutolo M, Capellino S, Montagna P, Villaggio B, Sulli A,
- Seriolo B, Straub RH. Sex hormones appear to play an important role as modulators of autoimmune
- disease onset/perpetuation. Steroid hormones are implicated in the immune response, with
- estrogens as enhancers at least of humoral immunity, and androgens and progesterone (and
- glucocorticoids) as natural immune suppressors. Serum levels of estrogens have been found to be
- normal in rheumatoid arthritis (RA) patients. Synovial fluid levels (SF) of proinflammatory
- estrogens relative to androgens are significantly elevated in both male and female RA patients
- as compared to controls, which is most probably due to an increase in local aromatase activity.
- Thus, available steroid pre-hormones are rapidly converted to proinflammatory estrogens in the
- synovial tissue in the presence of inflammatory cytokines (i.e. TNF alpha, IL-1, IL-6). The
- increased estrogen concentrations observed in RA SF of both sexes are characterized mainly by
- the hydroxylated forms, in particular 16 alpha-hydroxyestrone, showing a mitogenic stimulating
- role. Indeed, recent studies by us indicate that 17-beta estradiol (E2) clearly enhanced the
- expression of markers of cell growth and proliferation, whereas testosterone (T) induced an
- increase in markers indicating DNA damage and apoptosis. In particular, our data further shows
- that the enhancing role of estrogens on the immune/inflammatory response is exerted by
- activating the NFkB complex. In conclusion, locally increased estrogens may exert activating
- effects on synovial cell proliferation, including macrophages and fibroblasts, suggesting new
- roles for estrogens in RA.</span></span></span>
- </blockquote>
- <blockquote>
- <span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span
- style="font-size: xx-medium"
- >Tidsskr Nor Laegeforen. 1998 Mar 30;118(9):1390-5. <strong>[Receptor mediated effects of
- adenosine and caffeine] </strong>[Article in Norwegian] Eikvar L, Kirkebøen KA.
- "Adenosine consists of one ribose and one purine moiety and binds to specific receptors on cell
- membranes. The receptors are coupled to G-proteins and additionally to various effector-systems.
- When a mismatch occurs between energy supply and energy demand, adenosine is produced by the
- catabolism of adenosine triphosphate. The metabolism of an organ is thereby coupled to the local
- blood supply (metabolic vasodilation)."</span></span></span>
- </blockquote>
- <blockquote>
- <span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span
- style="font-size: xx-medium"
- >Arch Dermatol. 1988 Jan;124(1):72-9. <strong>Health effects of sunlight exposure in the United
- States. Results from the first National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey,
- 1971-1974.</strong><hr /></span></span></span>
- </blockquote>
- <blockquote>
- <span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span
- style="font-size: xx-medium"
- >Nippon Ganka Gakkai Zasshi. 1961 Dec 10;65:2439-44. <strong>[The effects of vitamin B2 group
- on the corneal metabolism. I.]</strong> [Article in Japanese] Funatsu H, Motegi
- T.</span></span></span>
- </blockquote>
- <blockquote>
- <span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span
- style="font-size: xx-medium"
- >J Cosmet Dermatol. 2004 Apr;3(2):88-93. <strong>Nicotinic acid/niacinamide and the
- skin.</strong> Gehring W.</span></span></span>
- </blockquote>
- <blockquote>
- <span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span
- style="font-size: xx-medium"
- >Circ Res. 1992 Nov;71(5):1268-76. <strong>Interferon-gamma and tumor necrosis factor synergize
- to induce nitric oxide production and inhibit mitochondrial respiration in vascular smooth
- muscle cells.</strong> Geng Y, Hansson GK, Holme E. "Nitric oxide (NO) is an important
- signal substance in cell-cell communication and can induce relaxation of blood vessels by
- activating guanylate cyclase in smooth muscle cells (SMCs)." "It was recently shown that SMCs
- may themselves produce NO or an NO-related compound. We have studied NO production and its
- effects on energy metabolism in cultured rat aortic smooth muscle cells. It was observed that
- the cytokines, interferon-gamma and tumor necrosis factor-alpha, synergistically induced an
- arginine-dependent production of NO in these cells. This was associated with an inhibition of
- complex I (NADH: ubiquinone oxidoreductase) and complex II (succinate: ubiquinone
- oxidoreductase) activities of the mitochondrial respiratory chain, suggesting that NO blocks
- mitochondrial respiration in these cells. Lactate accumulated in the media of the cells,
- implying an increased anaerobic glycolysis, but there was no reduction of viability. An
- NO-dependent inhibition of mitochondrial respiration and a switch to anaerobic glycolysis would
- reduce energy production of the SMCs. This would in turn reduce the contractile capacity of the
- cell and might represent another NO-dependent vasodilatory mechanism."</span></span></span>
- </blockquote>
- <blockquote>
- <span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span
- style="font-size: xx-medium"
- >Q Bull Northwest Univ Med Sch. 1952;26(2):120-3. <strong>Riboflavin and the cornea.</strong
- > Gordon OE.</span></span></span>
- </blockquote>
- <blockquote>
- <span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span
- style="font-size: xx-medium"
- >Bull Soc Fr Dermatol Syphiligr. 1950 May-Jun;57(3):277-80. <strong>Cutaneous-mucosal
- ariboflavinosis; rosacea of cornea and medio-facial seborrheic dermatitis.</strong
- > Gougerot H, Grupper C, Plas G.</span></span></span>
- </blockquote>
- <blockquote>
- <span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span
- style="font-size: xx-medium"
- >Br J Dermatol. 2005 Dec;153(6):1176-81. <strong>Comorbidity of rosacea and depression: an
- analysis of the National Ambulatory Medical Care Survey and National Hospital Ambulatory
- Care Survey--Outpatient Department data collected by the U.S. National Center for Health
- Statistics from 1995 to 2002.</strong> Gupta MA, Gupta AK, Chen SJ, Johnson AM.</span
- ></span></span>
- </blockquote>
- <blockquote>
- <span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span
- style="font-size: xx-medium"
- >Biochemistry. 1998 Nov 10;37(45):15835-41. <strong>Selective inactivation of
- alpha-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase and pyruvate dehydrogenase: reaction of lipoic acid with
- 4-hydroxy-2-nonenal.</strong>Humphries KM, Szweda LI. "Previous research has established
- that 4-hydroxy-2-nonenal (HNE), a highly toxic product of lipid peroxidation, is a potent
- inhibitor of mitochondrial respiration. HNE exerts its effects on respiration by inhibiting
- alpha-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase (KGDH). Because of the central role of KGDH in metabolism and
- emerging evidence that free radicals contribute to mitochondrial dysfunction associated with
- numerous diseases, it is of great interest to further characterize the mechanism of inhibition."
- "These results therefore identify a potential mechanism whereby free radical production and
- subsequent lipid peroxidation lead to specific modification of KGDH and PDH and inhibition of
- NADH-linked mitochondrial respiration."</span></span></span>
- </blockquote>
- <blockquote>
- <span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span
- style="font-size: xx-medium"
- >Biochemistry. 1998 Jan 13;37(2):552-7. <strong>Inhibition of NADH-linked mitochondrial
- respiration by 4-hydroxy-2-nonenal.</strong> Humphries KM, Yoo Y, Szweda LI. During the
- progression of certain degenerative conditions, including myocardial ischemia-reperfusion
- injury, mitochondria are a source of increased free-radical generation and exhibit declines in
- respiratory function(s). It has therefore been suggested that oxidative damage to mitochondrial
- components plays a critical role in the pathology of these processes. Polyunsaturated fatty
- acids of membrane lipids are prime molecular targets of free-radical damage. A major product of
- lipid peroxidation, 4-hydroxy-2-nonenal (HNE), is highly cytotoxic and can readily react with
- and damage protein. In this study, the effects of HNE on intact cardiac mitochondria were
- investigated to gain insight into potential mechanisms by which free radicals mediate
- mitochondrial dysfunction. Exposure of mitochondria to micromolar concentrations of HNE caused
- rapid declines in NADH-linked but not succinate-linked state 3 and uncoupled respiration. The
- activity of complex I was unaffected by HNE under the conditions of our experiments. Loss of
- respiratory activity reflected the inability of HNE-treated mitochondria to meet NADH
- demand during maximum rates of O2 consumption. HNE exerted its effects on intact mitochondria by
- inactivating alpha-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase. These results therefore identify a potentially
- important mechanism by which free radicals bring about declines in mitochondrial
- respiration.</span></span></span>
- </blockquote>
- <blockquote>
- <span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span
- style="font-size: xx-medium"
- >Tohoku J Exp Med. 1954 Dec 25;61(1):93-104. <strong>Contribution to the ocular manifestation
- of riboflavin deficiency. </strong>Irinoda K, Sato S.</span></span></span>
- </blockquote>
- <blockquote>
- <span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span
- style="font-size: xx-medium"
- >Brain Res. 2005 Jun 28;1048(1-2):32-40. <strong>Changes of body temperature and
- thermoregulatory responses of freely moving rats during GABAergic pharmacological
- stimulation to the preoptic area and anterior hypothalamus in several ambient
- temperatures. </strong>Ishiwata T, Saito T, Hasegawa H, Yazawa T, Kotani Y, Otokawa M,
- Aihara Y.</span></span></span>
- </blockquote>
- <blockquote>
- <span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span
- style="font-size: xx-medium"
- >Pediatr Neurol. 2005 Aug;33(2):94-7. <strong>Migraine and recurrent epistaxis in
- children. </strong>Jarjour IT, Jarjour LK.</span></span></span>
- </blockquote>
- <blockquote>
- <span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span
- style="font-size: xx-medium"
- >J Natl Cancer Inst Monogr 2000;(27):95-112. <strong>Tissue-specific synthesis and oxidative
- metabolism of estrogens. </strong>Jefcoate CR, Liehr JG, Santen RJ, Sutter TR, Yager
- JD, Yue W, Santner SJ, Tekmal R, Demers L, Pauley R, Naftolin F, Mor G, Berstein L "However,
- breast cancer tissue E2 levels are 10-fold to 50-fold higher in postmenopausal women than
- predicted from plasma levels."</span></span></span>
- </blockquote>
- <blockquote>
- <span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span
- style="font-size: xx-medium"
- >Endocrine. 2006 Dec;30(3):333-42. <strong>Effects of estradiol-17beta on expression of mRNA
- for seven angiogenic factors and their receptors in the endometrium of ovariectomized (OVX)
- ewes. </strong>Johnson ML, Grazul-Bilska AT, Redmer DA, Reynolds LP.</span></span
- ></span>
- </blockquote>
- <blockquote>
- <span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span
- style="font-size: xx-medium"
- >Clin Exp Dermatol. 2004 May;29(3):297-9. <strong>Remission of rosacea induced by reduction of
- gut transit time.</strong> Kendall SN. Rosacea is a chronic disorder characterized by
- hypersensitivity of the facial vasculature, presenting with intense flushing eventually leading
- to chronic erythema and telangiectasia. Although the precise aetiology of rosacea is not known,
- numerous associations with inflammatory gastrointestinal tract disorders have been reported.
- Furthermore, substance P-immunoreactive neurones occur in considerably greater numbers in tissue
- surrounding affected blood vessels suggesting involvement of neurogenic inflammation and
- moreover plasma kallikrein-kinin activation is consistently found in patients. In this report, a
- patient without digestive tract disease is described, who experienced complete remission of
- rosacea symptoms following ingestion of a material intended to sweep through the digestive tract
- and reduce transit time below 30 h. It is possible that intestinal bacteria are capable of
- plasma kallikrein-kinin activation and that flushing symptoms and the development of other
- characteristic features of rosacea result from frequent episodes of neurogenic inflammation
- caused by bradykinin-induced hypersensitization of facial afferent neurones. The possible
- relevance of this hypothesis to other conditions featuring afferent hypersensitivity, such as
- fibromyalgia, is considered.</span></span></span>
- </blockquote>
- <blockquote>
- <span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span
- style="font-size: xx-medium"
- >Br J Dermatol. 2007 May;156(5):957-64. <strong>Protection from photodamage by topical
- application of caffeine after ultraviolet irradiation.</strong> Koo SW, Hirakawa
- S, Fujii S, Kawasumi M, Nghiem P.</span></span></span>
- </blockquote>
- <blockquote>
- <span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span
- style="font-size: xx-medium"
- >Medicina (B Aires) 1985;45(2):110-6. <strong>[Fibrosis and cirrhosis in the rabbit induced by
- diethylstilbestrol and its inhibition with progesterone].</strong> [Article in Spanish]
- Lanari A, de Kremer GH.</span></span></span>
- </blockquote>
- <blockquote>
- <span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span
- style="font-size: xx-medium"
- >Free Radic Biol Med. 2000 Oct 15;29(8):714-20. <strong>Acrolein, a product of lipid
- peroxidation, inhibits glucose and glutamate uptake in primary neuronal cultures.</strong
- > Lovell MA, Xie C, Markesbery WR.</span></span></span>
- </blockquote>
- <blockquote>
- <span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span
- style="font-size: xx-medium"
- >J Cereb Blood Flow Metab. 2005 Jun;25(6):775-84. <strong>Effect of caffeine on cerebral blood
- flow response to somatosensory stimulation.</strong> Meno JR, Nguyen TS, Jensen EM,
- Alexander West G, Groysman L, Kung DK, Ngai AC, Britz GW, Winn HR. "Hypercarbic vasodilatation
- was unaffected by either caffeine or theophylline."</span></span></span>
- </blockquote>
- <blockquote>
- <span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span
- style="font-size: xx-medium"
- >Mol Pharmacol. 2007 Aug;72(2):395-406. <strong>Caffeine inhibits adenosine-induced
- accumulation of hypoxia-inducible factor-1alpha, vascular endothelial growth factor, and
- interleukin-8 expression in hypoxic human colon cancer cells. </strong>Merighi S,
- Benini A, Mirandola P, Gessi S, Varani K, Simioni C, Leung E, Maclennan S, Baraldi PG, Borea
- PA.</span></span></span>
- </blockquote>
- <blockquote>
- <span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span
- style="font-size: xx-medium"
- >Neuropharmacology. 2000 Apr 27;39(7):1309-18. <strong>Mechanisms of the neuroprotective effect
- of aspirin after oxygen and glucose deprivation in rat forebrain slices.</strong> Moro
- MA, De Alba J, Cardenas A, De Cristobal J, Leza JC, Lizasoain I, Diaz-Guerra MJ, Bosca L,
- Lorenzo P.</span></span></span>
- </blockquote>
- <blockquote>
- <span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span
- style="font-size: xx-medium"
- >Am J Obstet Gynecol 1987 Aug;157(2):312-317. <strong>Age-related changes in the female
- hormonal environment during reproductive life. </strong>Musey VC, Collins DC, Musey PI,
- Martino-Saltzman D, Preedy JR "We found that increased age during reproductive life is
- accompanied by a significant rise in both basal and stimulated serum follicle-stimulating
- hormone levels. This was accompanied by an increase in the serum level of estradiol-17 beta and
- the urine levels of estradiol-17 beta and 17 beta-estradiol-17-glucosiduronate." "Serum levels
- of dehydroepiandrosterone and dehydroepiandrosterone sulfate decreased with age, but serum
- testosterone was unchanged."</span></span></span>
- </blockquote>
- <blockquote>
- <span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span
- style="font-size: xx-medium"
- >Hepatology. 1997 Dec;26(6):1538-45. <strong>Dietary saturated fatty acids down-regulate
- cyclooxygenase-2 and tumor necrosis factor alfa and reverse fibrosis in alcohol-induced
- liver disease in the rat.</strong> Nanji AA, Zakim D, Rahemtulla A, Daly T, Miao L,
- Zhao S, Khwaja S, Tahan SR, Dannenberg AJ.</span></span></span>
- </blockquote>
- <blockquote>
- <span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span
- style="font-size: xx-medium"
- >J Physiol. 1994 Feb 15;475(1):83-93. <strong>Facilitatory effect of docosahexaenoic acid on
- N-methyl-D-aspartate response in pyramidal neurones of rat cerebral cortex.</strong
- > Nishikawa M, Kimura S, Akaike N. </span></span></span>
- </blockquote>
- <blockquote>
- <span style="color: #222222"><span style="font-family: georgia, times, serif"><span
- style="font-size: xx-medium"
- >J Gerontol, 1978 Mar, 33:2, 191-6. <strong>Circulating plasma levels of pregnenolone,
- progesterone, estrogen, luteinizing hormone, and follicle stimulating hormone in young and
- aged C57BL/6 mice during various stages of pregnancy. </strong>Parkening TA; Lau IF;
- Saksena SK; Chang MC.</span></span></span>
- </blockquote>
- <blockquote>
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-
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