Abstract

We suppose that at study of the pathogenesis of atherosclerosis, it is possible that some evolutionary aspects of the problem are missed. This aspect is related to the peculiarity of human adaptation to climatic geographic conditions of Eurasia, which differ significantly from the climate of East Africa, where Homo sapiens was formed as a tropical biological species and so it has remained to this day. A hypothesis has been put forward that the pathogenesis of atherosclerosis is associated with some previously unknown features of the genome and the physical properties of the human body that arose in the process of its adaptation to a mild and cold climate. These adaptive genetic changes that have contributed to the development (settling) by Homo sapiens of non-tropical, including cold and high mountain areas of the Earth, resulted to the fact that a man became the single species vulnerable (predisposed) to atherosclerosis.Atherosclerosis is apparently a purely human disease that appeared after adaptation of man to climatic conditions of temperate and northern latitudes of the northern hemisphere. The type of vessels (arteries or veins) and the site of their lumen have no role in the development of atherosclerotic changes. The primary and main causative factor in the development of atherosclerosis is blood temperature. The degree of blood cooling in the lungs depends on geographical latitudes and altitude above sea-level of the site of permanent residence of man. The preclinical stage of atherosclerosis may develop into a pathological form predominantly in individuals in the genome of which the amount of chromosomal Q-heterochromatin material is higher than its mean value per individual in the population.

Highlights

  • We suppose that at study of the pathogenesis of atherosclerosis, it is possible that some evolutionary aspects of the problem are missed

  • The preclinical stage of atherosclerosis may develop into a pathological form predominantly in individuals in the genome of which the amount of chromosomal Q-heterochromatin material is higher than its mean value per individual in the population

  • We suppose that atherosclerosis is apparently a purely human disease that appeared after adaptation of man to climatic conditions of temperate and northern latitudes of the northern hemisphere

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Summary

Introduction

“Equality is a social doctrine and variation is the biological norm. The overwhelming determinant of the variable human form and response is not genetic but environmental. We call into question the existing views asserting that: (a) the blood temperature in the left heart and the right heart should always be equal no one and nowhere has specially checked such a possibility; (b) a high content of atherogenous substances (fats, lipoproteins, fibrinogen filaments and etc.) in plasma is a sufficient and necessary condition for development of common forms of atherosclerosis. We assert that the temperature of the blood in the right heart and left heart is different; in the second should be lower than in the first, because in the process of breathing the blood will be cooled At this the degree of blood cooling in the lungs depends on geographical latitudes and altitude above sea-level of the site of permanent residence of man. Effect of cooled blood on atherogenic substances in plasma (phase transition of lipoproteins, fibrous elements and other atherogenous substances in plasma from “liquid” to “solid” state) must be different depending on the temperature of the blood and the level of body heat conductivity (BHC) of individuals in the population

State of the Problem
Major Prerequisites
Pathogenesis of Atherosclerosis
Other Evidences Supporting this Idea
Facts Difficult to Explain by Current Theories
Findings
How to Test our Hypothesis?
Full Text
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