Warfarin thins the blood by nuking Vitamin K 1 in the body.
The problem is that the body breaks down Vitamin K 1, into a whole lot of derivatives which are very important in other biological processes relating to heart and artery health, protein structure, and bone strength, so if you mess with vitamin K1, you mess with all the others. Warfarin is best described as a "nutrient robber". The real tragedy is that the medical literature has discussed this since 1980, yet what has been done by the system to educate doctors as to how to rectify the problems warfarin creates?
Warfarin chemically knocks out vitamin K 1 and it’s derivatives,
thereby prevents calcium being deposited in bones, and the body then
deposits that calcium on the sides of arteries as plaque. This INCREASES
the risk of heart attacks, and causes serious osteoporosis in elderly.
Vitamin K is also involved in other important protein manufacturing
pathways. Are elderly told that warfarin increases the risk of heart
disease and osteoporosis - or strokes? Not usually. They are either
told, or it is inferred, that the risk of osteoporosis, heart attacks
and strokes is because
they are old.
They may then be put on Fosamax, statins, and a whole raft of other
drugs which then rob their body of other nutrients on top of the vitamin
Ks, like Co-Q 10 and magnesium, thereby worsening heart health even
further.
Consider just two things.
Vitamin K is considered crucial in adolescence with regard to bone
turn over, right?
So why is this not thought about with regard to elderly? Do doctors
assume that elderly don’t need strong bones?
In 2007, an article came out which
discussed in great detail the problem of warfarin wrecking important
health pathways in elderly, as well as the fact that elderly on
Warfarin should be supplemented with vitamin K2-MK7 in order to allow
all the other functions of vitamin K 1 derivatives to work properly.
Is this fact acted upon? It would seem to be frequently, if not
completely ignored.
The tragedy is that it seems the system isn’t interested in what is in
its own literature, and it’s the elderly who pay, both financially and
healthwise.