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Not surprised. Regular intake of Vitamin C should take care of the problem. I take four grams daily. Wouldn’t be without it.
Interesting. Hypertension caused by Cytomegalovirus. Wasn’t is just 3 or 4 years ago that they found that heart attacks were caused by chlamydia pneumoniae attacking the insides of blood vessels and causing lesions that quickly built up plaques to form clots and the subsequent heart attack? Apparently everything is caused by a pathogen
Some 30 years ago the Red Cross vampires told me I was CMV negative. They said that was rare in a adults and that my CMV negative blood was valuable for use with children.
Despite being a smoker and big coffee drinker, my blood pressure was that of an athlete. Or so I was told.
ping...(Thanks for the ping, neverdem!)
cytomegalovirus or CMV -- a herpes virus that affects some 60 to 99 percent of adults globally -- appears to increase inflammation in blood vessels, causing high blood pressure.Thanks neverdem.
http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2006/08/060803091847.htm
A previous experimental immunization known as the Towne CMV vaccine did not prevent immune-compromised kidney-transplant patients from becoming infected with the virus, but it did keep them from developing symptoms, according to a 1984 study published in The Lancet. CMV subverts the machinery humans use to mount an immune response against viruses. It also uses some of that machinery, such as infection-fighting white blood cells, to spread itself throughout the body. Once a person has a virus, he or she typically develops antibodies against it and will not become infected again. But it appears that having CMV does not make a person immune to future infections another reason skeptics doubt a vaccine could accomplish such a feat, either
Other companies, including Novartis and Vical, have their own vaccine candidates in development, and GSK completed a phase 1 safety trial of another vaccine, but has yet to release the results.
Pascal Barollier, a Sanofi-Pasteur spokesperson, says the company is reworking the vaccine, possibly with a different antigen (a substance that stimulates the body's immune system to make disease-fighting antibodies against a germ) or adjuvant, and will need to test the new formulation in the lab before trying it out on people. “The study is suggestive that prevention of maternal CMV infection is an achievable goal,” Barollier said. “Sanofi Pasteur is committed to bringing such a vaccine to market as soon as possible to respond to an unmet medical need.”
here are some studies http://www.clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/results?term=CMV