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The Uncharted Architecture of Atherosclerosis: Beyond Lipid Panels — Functional Subspecies, Risk Stratification, and Targeted Therapy

  Prefatory Note — On Levels of Resolution This note serves as the conceptual introduction to the book. It explains the levels of resolution through which the reader will move and how they fit together into a single architecture of disease . Every mature science passes through the same turning point. It begins by measuring what it can see, and only later discovers that the decisive structure lies beneath the surface of those measurements. Chemistry measured atomic weights and valence long before it understood electron shells. Blood pressure was a useful number in medicine decades before arterial wall biology was understood. In lipid medicine , we have measured total cholesterol, LDL‑C, HDL‑C, and triglycerides for generations, yet have known remarkably little about what these numbers actually contain in structural and functional terms. This book is written at that turning point. From surface numbers to hidden structure The conventional lipid panel is not wrong. It is a nec...

Breathing comes before everything in the architecture of life

The foundational baseline of human existence Life begins with an inhalation and ends when breathing stops. Between these two defining moments, every heartbeat, every metabolic shift, and every conscious thought unfolds on the absolute condition that respiration continues. While the organism can survive without food or water for days, the absence of breath is tolerated for mere minutes. Respiration is not simply one isolated physiological function among many. It represents the primary baseline condition under which all other systems are organized, integrated, and sustained. Because this process is so continuous and reliable, it easily fades into the background of daily awareness, noticed only when it fails during moments of acute shortage, physical exertion, or profound anxiety. The mechanical dialogue of pressure and motion Respiration extends far beyond the simple exchange of oxygen and carbon dioxide at the cellular level. With every cyclic movement of the diaphragm , the structura...

Science, Ceiling, and the Myth of Immortality

When people talk about “raising the ceiling” in human longevity , they often mean something very specific in scientific terms: increasing the maximum lifespan of the human species. This is not the same as helping people live better or healthier lives. The ceiling refers to the highest ages that any human beings can reach, and so far, there is no convincing evidence that this upper boundary has shifted beyond the roughly  110  to 120 -year range observed in rare exceptional individuals. That distinction matters because much of the public conversation around longevity mixes two very different goals. One is scientifically grounded: extending healthspan , the years of life spent in good health and functional independence. The other is far more dramatic: claiming that aging can be reversed , death defeated, or human lifespan pushed far beyond its known biological limits. Science supports the first goal much more strongly than the second. Most serious longevity research does not pro...

Beyond the Single Number: Toward a Functional Classification of Lipoprotein(a) Subfractions

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Mykola Iabluchanskyi, Vladimir Shlyakhover, Pavlo Garkaviy, Andriy Yabluchanskiy Abstract Lipoprotein(a) [Lp(a)] is currently measured and interpreted as a single quantitative entity, with plasma concentration used as a population-level indicator of cardiovascular risk above defined thresholds. Yet established structural evidence already shows that Lp(a) is not one particle but a heterogeneous family of molecularly distinct subfractions, differing in apo(a) isoform size , oxidized phospholipid content , and fibrin-binding properties. This article advances the hypothesis that structural heterogeneity corresponds to functional heterogeneity: that distinct Lp(a) subfractions may operate in different biological modes, ranging from physiological and reparative to pathological and atherogenic , and that the balance among these modes, rather than total concentration alone, may help determine individual clinical outcome. If correct, this view challenges the adequacy of single-number Lp(a) mea...

Why embodiment mattered in the first place: the body as the origin of mind

There is a temptation, when thinking about mind, to imagine it as something that floats free of the body: a pure process of reasoning, pattern recognition, or information integration that could, in principle, run on any substrate. The history of cognitive science and artificial intelligence is partly the history of this temptation and of its repeated failure. We have argued elsewhere for a definition of consciousness that resists abstraction: consciousness is the combination of inner experience and reflection on that experience, and both of these are rooted, at their origin, in a body. Not just any body — a vulnerable, metabolically regulated organism that depends on its environment to survive, that can be harmed, that is always at some level of risk. This is not a romantic claim about the specialness of flesh. It is a structural one. A system that has nothing to lose, nothing to protect, nothing that hurts when damaged, has no reason to build an inner perspective on the world. The i...