Guest guest Posted June 16, 2007 Report Share Posted June 16, 2007 What a beautiful post. Take it to heart before you lose the cognitive function of a loved one (or yourself). Statins, PPIs and a plethora of pharmaceuticals will end up going the way of the dinosaur after long term use becomes the source for accurate data. Go inside and ask if it is right for you. Experts, including myself, be damned. -Dave ----- Original Message ----- From: Amber <mailto:amber@...> gallstones <mailto:gallstones > Sent: Friday, June 15, 2007 6:33 PM Subject: An M.D.'s report on statin drugs/long I had this in my saved file and think this is such valuable information, I'm forwarding it on. It's long but might be worth the read to people with cholesterol problems. Also Dr. Bruce West has said that, as a person ages, their cholesterol actually need to be higher. 300 used to be a normal reading until the drugs companies realized they could make more money if they lowered the supposedly acceptable numbers. Eventually numbers are expected to be lowered more. Anyone with a total cholesterol of 150 of less is opening themselves up to increased risk of cancer. Amber I was still in practice, twenty years ago, when lovastatin, the first statin drug, became available for use by we primary care physicians. We learned to expect liver inflammation and occasional muscle aches and pains. With the dosages used at that time and with a relatively small number of patients on the early statins, the side effect issue impressed me as being acceptable. This is no longer true. Today, with more potent drugs, millions of people taking them and doses triple and quadruple those of the past, our side effect profile has radically changed. Now, cognitive damage, emotional and behavioral change, neuropathies and even neuro-degenerative damage are increasingly recognized as associated with statin drug use. But there is something even more perverse - the element of permanence of some of these consequences. The pharmaceutical industry has been quick to add such conditions as neuropathy and amnesia to their long list of " disclaimers " in their drug reference information. Yes, within the past six years, after my own cognitive reactions to statins in the prevailing climate of complete physician denial, drug companies have belatedly added cognitive damage but not one word about permanent cognitive damage. And the same for neuromuscular - yes, most of the drug companies now admit that peripheral neuropathy may be a consequence of statin use but have never mentioned it might be disabling, crippling or permanent. The deliberate pattern of gross misrepresentation and disinformation of statin drug side effects to physicians who prescribe these drugs has created a climate where many physicians will summarily dismiss patient claims of damage as impossible, thereby placing them in harm's way. The first evidence of permanence came from reports of cognitive problems associated with statin use. Hope was one of the first to receive widespread media attention - a former CEO reduced to unemployable status due to persistent loss of short-term memory. Today, four years after the onset, is still grossly impaired. He is one of many hundreds who have persistent cognitive deficits long after stopping their statin. Next came reports of muscle aches and pains brought on by statin drugs that persisted and even worsened despite promptly stopping the statin. Two astronaut friends of mine, having no history of muscle problems, experienced muscle pains shortly after their statin was started for mild hypercholesterolemi a. Much to their dismay these pains have persisted years after they stopped the offending drug. They are but two of thousands of patients in this growing subgroup of people with persistent and apparently permanent muscle symptoms seemingly triggered by statin drug use. Current research indicates that many of these have an unsuspected genetic predisposition. Some of these cases respond to CoQ10, many do not. Another growing reality is that of peripheral neuropathy, particularly unresponsive to treatment, coming on soon after statin therapy is initiated. Once this occurs, not only does it seems to be permanent but tends to worsen in many patients. Hundreds of victims are incapacitated, even crippled by this unfortunate side effect, seemingly related to alterations in CoQ10 availability brought on by statin drug interference with the mevalonate pathway. Mevalonate pathway disruption also seems to be the mechanism of action for another type of neurological disaster associated with statin use, that of neurodegenerative disease onset shortly after the start of treatment. Only in the past few years have we learned of the unfortunate tendency of statins to promote the tau protein formation while inhibiting the usual sequence of biochemical reactions in the mevalonate pathway. Tau protein is now known to promote the formation of neuro-fibrillatory tangles with secondary neuronal damage, offering a possible explanation for the unusual number of cases we are seeing of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, Parkinsonism, frontal lobe dementia and Alzheimers' disease and other neurodegenerative conditions shortly after statins are started. This suggests that these diseases are somehow being triggered by statins. Need I add that these diseases are both permanent and progressive. Not only have statin drug companies failed to adequately warn prescribing physicians of permanent cognitive loss associated with statin use, they have failed to warn about permanent neuromuscular and neurodegenerative consequences. Thousands of unsuspecting patients have become victims and in most of these cases their doctors, having had no advance warning from the pharmaceutical industry, have tended to disregard patient complaints, offering almost any explanation other than the correct one. Unfortunately, as these damage claims come to the attention of the courts many MDs will be forced to share liability with the drug companies. On hearing hundreds of patient complaints about doctor rebuff on this subject of statin side effects, I well recall the words of Doctor Ellsworth Amidon, my professor of medicine at Vermont College of Medicine, way too many years ago: " Listen well to the words of the patient, my young doctors, for they are telling you the diagnosis. " Duane Graveline MD MPH Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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