If I have been the subject of chronic bacterial infection that has gone on for a good decade or more without my knowing it, I would imagine that the bacteria would have lined my arterial and capillary walls, and because of the mass accumulated, they would have the quorum needed to create a strong biofilm to resist the bodies' defense system, and in so doing they would have used calcium to strengthen the biofilm as well as to serve as a protective wall. This wall, as part of the biofilm, could range from being frail to being very sturdy, depending on how well my white blood cells have stood up to the challenge of killing these bacteria. The plaque that results would be a mixture of dead white cells as well as dead bacteria, as well as live white blood cells and bacteria, meshed in with the calcium and the biofilm, all forming together as plaque. The biofilm may not be distinct, but they are a formidable structure nonetheless.There should not be biofilms in your arteries! That would be very severe... There are biofilms in the hole connecting the mouth to anus (and urethra, vagina, and skin to some degree). So there are plaques that are part of biofilms, but I don't think they've been named distinct from the biofilm itself, have they? Biofilms can cause degeneration which causes arterial plaques, but that's another story.
I've tried cyproheptadine and it's also an antagonist to serotonin. Its effect is too miniscule to have any significant effect on me. How would metergoline be any different? I've tried low-dose doxycycline for more than 2 weeks to see if I could benefit from some anti-inflammatory effects, but so far my blood pressure has stayed steady.Keloid is from serotonin. So are blood pressure problems. Metergoline might be handy to try.
I believe the keloid is more an effect of hypoxia, with oxygen deficiency being a primary driver. The keloid originated from the time when I had hypoxemia arising from mercury toxicity. Existing keloids are holdovers from that past. In the case of high blood pressure, it is mainly from hypoxia, which I believe to originate from plaque that's blocking capillaries in my kidneys. So my effort is towards lysing the plaque with the help of proteolytic enzymes. Also, I need to formulate a cyclodextrin-based topical solution to aid in eating up the fatty portion of plaque. May use DMSO as the carrier, and use vitamin E as well.