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SOME GUIDELINES
Persons with high blood pressure need to increase their daily amount of vitamin E gradually, say the Shutes. This is because the vitamin increases the strength of the heartbeat, and a gradual increase of E avoids any sudden rise in blood pressure. The Shutes found that over a period of months, a gradually increasing dose can yield a lower blood pressure.
The Shutes said that persons with a chronic rheumatic heart do not tolerate much vitamin E and need medical supervision if they are to use it.
Persons taking drugs such as Coumadin (warfarin) commonly find that their tests indicate a decreased need for "blood-thinning" drugs. The intelligent way to deal with this is to work with your doctor, who is responsible for your prescription.
A person in good health may wish to begin with a supplemental amount of 200 I.U. of vitamin E per day and try it for a couple of weeks. Then, 400 IU might be taken daily for another two weeks. For the next two weeks, 600 I.U. daily, and for the next two weeks, 800 I.U. per day and so on. One ultimately takes the least amount that gives the best results. This approach is essentially that of Richard A. Passwater and is provided in more detail in his book Supernutrition (1975, Pocket Books).
The problem is, that one would have to takes one's anticoagulation to an even higher level, to get it reduced by the doc)
and I believe a simple NO would have been too threatening for them
At the last doctor visit, we learned that doctors will try to
thin the blood to 2-3 times thinner than that of a normal
person. This just doesn't seem like a good idea to me, and
indeed he has had some issues with bruises not healing up.
I've been asking around about getting off of warfarin
when one's arteries are now completely clear, and
have been told that "Abruptly discontinuing warfarin
may induce a rebound prothrombotic state." I've also been
told that doctors will probably want him to stay on warfarin
just because, since he's had a stroke.
My brother on coumadin routinely has his INR measured. He tried to see if vitamin E at very high dosages would have an effect, but it didn't.
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