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    Home»Health»Scientists Say This Simple Supplement May Actually Reverse Heart Disease
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    Scientists Say This Simple Supplement May Actually Reverse Heart Disease

    By SciTechDaily.comMay 8, 2026No Comments6 Mins Read
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    Glowing Human Heart Concept
    A common food supplement may have the power to do something once thought nearly impossible: reverse a dangerous form of heart disease. Credit: Stock

    Scientists in Japan say a common supplement may actually help “unclog” certain diseased heart arteries from the inside out.

    A simple food supplement sold in Japan may have helped reverse a dangerous form of heart disease that often resists standard treatment, according to researchers at Osaka University. The findings, originally published in the European Heart Journal, continue to attract attention because they describe something rarely seen in cardiology: clogged heart arteries becoming noticeably clearer after a nutritional intervention rather than conventional cholesterol lowering alone.

    Scientists Target a Hidden Form of Heart Disease

    Coronary artery disease (CAD) is one of the world’s leading causes of death. In most cases, the condition develops when cholesterol-rich plaque narrows the arteries that supply blood to the heart, increasing the risk of chest pain, heart attack, and heart failure.

    But researchers in Japan have spent years studying a lesser-known and often overlooked condition called triglyceride deposit cardiomyovasculopathy (TGCV). Unlike classic atherosclerosis, TGCV is driven by the buildup of triglycerides inside cells within the heart and blood vessel walls. The disorder appears to stem from defective intracellular fat breakdown, which allows fatty deposits to accumulate where they should not.

    “Almost 15 years ago, we identified a new type of CAD called triglyceride deposit cardiomyovasculopathy (TGCV), in which the coronary arteries are occluded by triglyceride deposits generated by defective intracellular breakdown of triglycerides in vascular smooth muscle cells,” said lead author Ken-ichi Hirano. “This mechanism makes TGCV distinct from classic cholesterol-induced atherosclerosis, and accounts for patients who are resistant to standard remedies for CAD.”

    Researchers say TGCV appears especially common in people with diabetes mellitus and in patients undergoing hemodialysis. Because the condition can resemble conventional coronary artery disease, many cases may go undiagnosed.

    Triglyceride Deposit Cardiomyovasculopathy
    TGCV is an emerging cardiovascular disorder characterized by diffuse narrowing coronary atherosclerosis with triglyceride (TG) deposition caused by defective intracellular lipolysis. TGCV is an often-undiagnosed condition in patients who are resistant to standard therapies. Panels A and B concern two patients in their 60s with refractory angina pectoris and diabetes mellitus. After being diagnosed with TGCV, they started dietary intake of tricaprin. Their symptoms improved within a couple of months. Follow-up coronary computed tomography angiography showed marked regression of atherosclerotic lesions with luminal dilatation (left coronary artery shown as red line in upper panel A; right and left coronary arteries in upper panel B). The low-attenuation area observed from the adventitial side (yellow and orange area, in the middle, panel A) and its volume (yellow bars in the middle, panel B) were reduced, indicating ameliorated lipid involvement. These observations were associated with increased myocardial lipolysis on iodine-123-β-methyl-p-iodophenylpentadecanoic acid scintigraphy (lower panels). Credit: 2022, Ken-ichi Hirano, Remarkable regression of diffuse coronary atherosclerosis in patients with triglyceride deposit cardiomyovasculopathy., European Heart Journal

    Tricaprin Produced “Remarkable” Changes

    The Osaka University team focused on tricaprin, a commercially available dietary supplement believed to stimulate fat metabolism in heart muscle cells.

    The published report described two patients in their 60s who had diabetes mellitus, severe chest pain, and persistent coronary artery disease that did not respond adequately to existing treatments. After being diagnosed with TGCV, both patients began taking tricaprin regularly. Within months, their symptoms improved significantly.

    More surprisingly, follow-up scans revealed visible changes inside the arteries themselves. Imaging showed reduced triglyceride buildup and widening of previously narrowed blood vessels. Researchers also observed evidence of increased fat breakdown activity within heart tissue.

    “Now we report a remarkable regression of diffuse coronary atherosclerosis in two patients with TGCV,” stated Hirano. “Both had suffered from refractory chest pain and diabetes until diagnosis with TGCV, and subsequent dietary intake of tricaprin led to symptom relief.”

    The researchers emphasized that the improvements occurred without major changes in standard blood lipid measurements, suggesting the supplement may have worked through a different biological pathway than traditional cholesterol-lowering therapies.

    Coronary CT Images With a Color Coded Display
    Coronary CT images with a color-coded display for case 1 (panel A). Color-coded short-axis CT images before (A) and after (on-treatment) (B) tricaprin treatment. The short-axis images of the left coronary anterior descending artery are shown at every 0.2 mm: a, b, c, d, e, and f correspond to cross-sectional images of the second image. Credit: 2022, Ken-ichi Hirano, Remarkable regression of diffuse coronary atherosclerosis in patients with triglyceride deposit cardiomyovasculopathy., European Heart Journal

    Why the Findings Stood Out

    Cardiologists have long known that aggressive cholesterol reduction can sometimes slow or partially reverse plaque buildup. However, the Japanese team says this may represent a different mechanism entirely.

    “While atherosclerosis regression following decreased serum lipid levels is well-described, this is the first report of regression due to increased triglyceride lipolysis within cells, and as such is a conceptually novel treatment for coronary atherosclerosis,” said Hirano.

    That distinction has drawn scientific interest because it points toward a new strategy for treating patients who do not improve with conventional therapies such as statins, stents, or other interventions aimed primarily at cholesterol.

    Follow-Up Research Continues

    Since the 2023 publication, researchers have continued investigating TGCV and tricaprin-based therapies. A Phase IIa clinical trial in Japan evaluated CNT-01 (tricaprin/trisdecanoin) in patients with idiopathic TGCV, reflecting growing interest in whether boosting intracellular fat metabolism could become a viable treatment strategy.

    Scientists caution that the original report involved only two patients, meaning much larger studies are still needed before tricaprin could become a mainstream therapy for coronary artery disease. Researchers also stress that people should not replace prescribed cardiac treatments with supplements without medical supervision.

    Still, the findings have raised hopes for patients with treatment-resistant forms of heart disease. For some experts, the study highlights how much remains unknown about the different ways artery disease can develop inside the human body.

    As scientists continue exploring TGCV, the work from Osaka University suggests that future heart disease treatments may eventually focus not only on cholesterol in the bloodstream, but also on how fat is processed deep inside the cells of the heart itself.

    Reference: “Remarkable regression of diffuse coronary atherosclerosis in patients with triglyceride deposit cardiomyovasculopathy” by Ken-ichi Hirano, Masahiro Higashi and Kenichi Nakajima, 30 December 2022, European Heart Journal.
    DOI: 10.1093/eurheartj/ehac762

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