In 1942, Dr. H. W. Bennetts dissected 21 cattle known to have died of  "falling disease".  This was the name given to the sudden, inexplicable  death that struck herds of cattle in certain regions of Australia.  Dr.  Bennett believed the disease was linked to copper deficiency.  He found  that 19 of the 21 cattle had abnormal hearts, showing atrophy and  abnormal connective tissue infiltration (fibrosis) of the heart muscle (
1).
In 1963, Dr. W. F. Coulson and colleagues found that 22 of 33  experimental copper-deficient pigs died of cardiovascular disease.  11  of 33 died of coronary heart disease, the quintessential modern  human cardiovascular disease.  Pigs on a severely copper-deficient diet  showed weakened and ruptured arteries (aneurysms), while moderately  deficient pigs "survived with scarred vessels but demonstrated a  tendency toward premature atherosclerosis" including foam cell  accumulation (
2).  Also in 1963, Dr. C. R. Ball and colleagues published a  paper describing blood clots in the heart and coronary arteries, heart  muscle degeneration, ventricular calcification and early death in mice  fed a lard-rich diet (
3).
This is where Dr. Leslie M. Klevay enters the story.  Dr.  Klevay suspected that Ball's mice had suffered from copper deficiency,  and decided to test the hypothesis.  He replicated Ball's experiment to  the letter, using the same strain of mice and the same diet.  Like Ball,  he observed abnormal clotting in the heart, degeneration and  enlargement of the heart muscle, and early death.  He also showed by  electrocardiogram that the hearts of the copper-deficient mice were  often contracting abnormally (arrhythmia).
But then the 
coup de grace: he  prevented these symptoms by supplementing the drinking water of a second  group of mice with copper (
4).  In the words of Dr. Klevay: "copper was an  antidote to fat intoxication" (
5).  I believe this was his tongue-in-cheek  way of saying that the symptoms had been misdiagnosed by Ball as due to dietary fat, when in fact they were due to a lack of copper.
Since this time, a number of papers have been published on the relationship between copper intake and cardiovascular disease in animals, including several showing that copper supplementation prevents atherosclerosis in one of the most commonly used animal models of cardiovascular disease (
6, 
7, 
8).  Copper supplementation also corrects abnormal heart enlargement-- called hypertrophic cardiomyopathy-- and heart failure due to high blood pressure in mice (
9).
For more than three decades, Dr. Klevay has been a champion of the  copper deficiency theory of cardiovascular disease.  According to him,  copper deficiency is the only single intervention that has caused the  full spectrum of human cardiovascular disease in animals, including:
- Heart attacks (myocardial infarction)
- Blood clots in the coronary arteries and heart
- Fibrous atherosclerosis including smooth muscle proliferation
- Unstable blood vessel plaque
- Foam cell accumulation and fatty streaks
- Calcification of heart tissues
- Aneurysms (ruptured vessels)
- Abnormal electrocardiograms
- High cholesterol
- High blood pressure
If this theory is so important, why have most people never heard of it?   There could be at least three reasons.  The first is that the  emergence of the copper deficiency theory coincided with the rise of the  diet-heart hypothesis, whereby saturated fat causes heart attacks by  raising blood cholesterol.  Bolstered by encouraging findings, this theory took the Western medical world by  storm, for decades dominating all other theories in the medical  literature and public health efforts.  My opinions on the diet-heart hypothesis aside, the two theories are not mutually exclusive.
The second reason you may not have heard of the theory is due to a lab  assay called copper-mediated LDL oxidation.  Researchers take LDL  particles (from blood, the same ones the doctor measures as part of a cholesterol test) and expose  them to a high concentration of copper in a test tube.  Free copper ions  are oxidants, and the researchers then measure the amount of time it  takes the LDL to oxidize.  Yet questions have been raised about the relevance of this method to human cardiovascular disease, because studies  have shown that the amount of time it takes copper to oxidize LDL in a  test tube doesn't predict how much oxidized LDL you'll actually find in  the bloodstream of the person you took the LDL from (
10, 
11).
The fact that copper is such an efficient oxidant has led some  researchers to propose that copper oxidizes LDL in human blood, and  therefore dietary copper may contribute to heart disease (oxidized LDL is likely a central player in heart disease).   The problem with this theory is that there are virtually no free  copper ions in human serum.  Then there's the  fact that supplementing humans with copper actually reduces the susceptibility of red  blood cells to oxidation (by copper in a test tube, unfortunately), which is difficult to reconcile with the idea that dietary copper increases oxidative stress in the blood (
13).
The third reason you may never have heard of the theory is more  problematic.  Several studies have found that a higher level copper in  the blood correlates with a higher risk of heart attack  (
14, 
15).  At this point, I could  hang up my hat, and declare the animal experiments irrelevant to  humans.  But let's dig deeper.
Nutrient status is sometimes a slippery thing to measure.  As it turns  out, serum copper isn't a good marker of copper status.   In a 4-month  trial of copper depletion in humans, blood copper stayed stable, while  the activity of copper-dependent enzymes in the blood declined  (
16).  These include the important copper-dependent antioxidant, superoxide dismutase. As a side note, lysyl  oxidase is another copper-dependent enzyme that cross-links the  important structural proteins collagen and elastin in the artery wall,  potentially explaining some of the vascular consequences of copper  deficiency.  Clotting factor VIII increased dramatically during copper  depletion, perhaps predicting an increased tendency to clot.   Even more  troubling, three of the 12 women developed heart problems during the  trial, which the authors felt was unusual:
We observed a significant increase over control values in  the number of ventricular premature discharges (VPDs) in three women  after 21, 63, and 91 d of consuming the low-copper diet; one was  subsequently diagnosed as having a second-degree heart block.
In another human copper restriction trial, 11 weeks of modest copper restriction coincided with heart trouble in 4 out of 23 subjects, including one heart attack (
17):
In the history of conducting numerous human studies at the Beltsville Human Nutrition Research Center involving participation by 337 subjects, there had previously been no instances of any health problem related to heart function. During the 11 wk of the present study in which the copper density of the diets fed the subjects was reduced from the pretest level of 0.57 mg/ 1000 kcal to 0.36 mg/1000 kcal, 4 out of 23 subjects were diagnosed as having heart-related abnormalities.
The other reason to be skeptical of the association between  blood copper and heart attack risk is that inflammation increases  copper in the blood (
18, 
19). Blood copper  level correlates strongly with the marker of inflammation C-reactive  protein (CRP) in humans, yet substantially increasing copper intake  doesn't increase CRP (
20, 
21).  This suggests that  elevated blood copper is likely a symptom of inflammation, rather than its  cause, and presents a possible explanation for the association between blood copper level and heart  attack risk.
Only a few studies have looked at the relationship between more accurate markers of copper status and cardiovascular disease in humans.  Leukocyte copper status, a  marker of tissue status, is lower in people with cardiovascular disease (
22, 
23).  People who die of heart attacks generally have less copper in their hearts than people who die of other causes, although this could be an effect rather than a cause of the heart attack (
24).  Overall, I find the human data lacking.  It would be useful to see more studies examining liver copper status in relation to cardiovascular disease, as the liver is the main storage organ for copper.  Until we have more human data, it will remain unclear whether copper deficiency is a significant contributor to cardiovascular disease.
According to a 2001 study, the majority of Americans may have copper intakes below the USDA recommended daily allowance (
25), many substantially so.  This problem is exacerbated by the fact that copper levels in food have declined in industrial nations over the course of the 20th century, something I'll discuss in the next post.