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FDA
Warns of Memory Problems with Statins
(Original article here)
February 28, 2012 in Editorial, Report It
Currently 4.6/512345
The FDA has just updated its
warnings on cholesterol-lowering drugs known as statins. These
include Altoprev (lovastatin extended-release), Crestor (rosuvastatin),
Lescol (fluvastatin), Lipitor (atorvastatin), Livalo (pitavastatin),
Mevacor (lovastatin), Pravachol (pravastatin), and Zocor (simvastatin),
as well as the combination products Advicor (lovastatin/niacin
extended-release), Simcor (simvastatin/niacin extended-release) and
Vytorin (simvastatin/ezetimibe).
For years, some patients have been complaining of memory
difficulties while they are taking statin drugs to lower their
cholesterol. Many find that their brain function returns to normal
within a few days or weeks of stopping the drug, but some suffer for
a very long time after discontinuation. The FDA has now acknowledged
that these drugs can have cognitive side effects; the agency warns
patients not to discontinue the drug on their own, but to consult
with their health care professionals.
In addition, the feds are alerting patients taking a statin that
their risk of type 2 diabetes (also known as non-insulin-dependent
diabetes) is increased. The FDA believes that "the heart benefit of
statins outweighs this small increased risk." Patients who are
already struggling with blood sugar control, however, might well
wish to discuss this with their health care providers. There are
other ways to control cholesterol that do not raise blood sugar
levels.
We have been receiving reports of serious muscle and memory
problems linked to statins for decades. We have tried repeatedly
to get the FDA's attention about these complications but have been
met with a great deal of resistance....until now. For almost a
decade we have been warning that statins might raise blood sugar in
susceptible individuals. At long last the FDA seems to have caught
up with the wisdom of our readers and visitors to this website. If
you would like to read more about statin side effects check out this
link.
For more information on these problems from statins, readers may
want to check our book, Best Choices from The People's Pharmacy, in
which we discuss a number of statin side effects and alternative
ways to get cholesterol down. It is more relevant today than when we
wrote it a few years ago. There is also a chapter on diabetes and
non-drug ways that can help control blood sugar.
The FDA urges patients and physicians to report negative side
effects of statin drugs to its MedWatch program. We also suggest
that you report your experience with cognitive and memory problems
below. If you have had more trouble controlling your blood sugar
while taking a statin-type drug we would also like to hear from you.
Do
YOU Take Any of These 11 Dangerous Cholesterol Drugs?
Statin Drugs: A Surprising
Cause of Diabetes
Original
article here
Statins have been shown to increase your risk of
diabetes through a few different
mechanisms. The most important one is that they increase insulin
resistance, which can be extremely harmful to your health. Increased
insulin resistance contributes to chronic inflammation in your body,
and inflammation is the hallmark of most diseases. In fact,
increased insulin resistance can lead to heart disease, which,
ironically, is the primary reason for taking a cholesterol-reducing
drug in the first place! It can also promote
belly fat, high blood pressure, heart attacks, chronic fatigue,
thyroid disruption, and diseases like Parkinson's, Alzheimer's, and
cancer.
Secondly, statins increase your diabetes risk by actually raising
your blood sugar. When you eat a meal that contains starches and
sugar, some of the excess sugar goes to your liver, which then
stores it away as cholesterol and triglycerides. Statins work by
preventing your liver from making cholesterol. As a result, your
liver returns the sugar to your bloodstream, which raises your blood
sugar levels.
Now, it's important to realize that drug-induced diabetes and
genuine type 2 diabetes are not necessarily identical.
If you're on a statin drug and find that your blood glucose is
elevated, it's possible that what you have is just hyperglycemia—a
side effect, and the result of your medication. Unfortunately, many
doctors will at that point mistakenly diagnose you with "type 2
diabetes," and possibly prescribe another drug, when all you may
need to do is simply discontinue the statin in order for your blood
glucose levels to revert back to normal. So if friends or loved ones
you know are on a statin (and one in four Americans over 45 are) and
they are told they have diabetes, please do them a favor and tell
them about the information in this article.
Major
Statin Drug Study Found to Be Flawed
A study known as the JUPITER trial initially suggested
cholesterol-lowering statin drugs might prevent heart-related death
in many more people than just those with high cholesterol. But two
years after its publication in 2008, researchers came out saying the
JUPITER results are flawed -- and that they do not support the
benefits initially reported. Not only is there no "striking decrease
in coronary heart disease complications", but a more recent report
has also called into question drug companies' involvement in such
trials.
According to a report by ABC News :
"... major discrepancies exists between the significant reductions
in nonfatal stroke and heart attacks reported in the JUPITER trial
and what has been found in other research ... 'The JUPITER data set
appears biased,' [the researchers] wrote in conclusion."
If You Take Statins, You MUST Take CoQ10
Statins deplete your body of CoQ10, which can have devastating
results. If you take statin drugs without taking CoQ10, your health
is at serious risk. Unfortunately, this describes the majority of
people who take them in the United States. CoQ10 is a cofactor
(co-enzyme) that is essential for the creation of ATP molecules,
which you need for cellular energy production. Organs such as your
heart have higher energy requirements, and therefore require more
CoQ10 to function properly. Produced mainly in your liver, it also
plays a role in maintaining blood glucose.
Physicians rarely inform people of this risk and only occasionally
advise them to take a CoQ10 supplement. As your body gets more and
more depleted of CoQ10, you may suffer from fatigue, muscle weakness
and soreness, and eventually heart failure.
Coenzyme Q10 is also very important in the process of neutralizing
free radicals. So when your CoQ10 is depleted, you enter a vicious
cycle of increased free radicals, loss of cellular energy, and
damaged mitochondrial DNA. If you decide to take a CoQ10 supplement
and are over the age of 40, it is important to choose the reduced
version, called ubiquinol. Ubiquinol is a FAR more effective form—I
personally take it daily for its many far ranging benefits. As for
dosage, Dr. Graveline, a family doctor and former astronaut, made
the following recommendation in a previous interview on statins and
CoQ10:
If you have symptoms of statin damage such as muscle pain, take
anywhere from 200 to 500 mg
If you just want to use it preventively, 200 mg or less should be
sufficient
Statins Impair Numerous Biological Functions
Statin drugs also interfere with other biological functions,
including an early step in the mevalonate pathway, which is the
central pathway for the steroid management in your body. Products of
this pathway that are negatively affected by statins include:
All your sex hormones
Cortisone
The dolichols, which are involved in keeping the membranes inside
your cells healthy
All sterols, including cholesterol and vitamin D (which is similar
to cholesterol and is produced from cholesterol in your skin)
It's still uncertain whether statins actually deplete your body of
vitamin D, but they do reduce your body's natural ability to create
active vitamin D (1,25-dihydroxycholecalciferol). This is the
natural outcome of the drug's cholesterol-reducing ability, because
you need cholesterol to make vitamin D! It's the raw material your
body uses for vitamin D conversion after you've exposed your skin to
sunlight. It's also well-documented that vitamin D improves insulin
resistance, so needless to say, when you take a statin drug, you
forfeit this 'built-in' health-promoting mechanism, which is yet
another clue as to how statins can cause diabetes.
Ninety-Nine Out of 100 People do Not Need
Statin Drugs
That these drugs have proliferated the market the way they have is a
testimony to the power of marketing, corruption and corporate greed,
because the odds are very high— greater than 100 to 1—that if you're
taking a statin, you don't really need it. The ONLY subgroup that
might benefit are those born with a genetic defect called familial
hypercholesterolemia, as this makes them resistant to traditional
measures of normalizing cholesterol.
And, even more importantly, cholesterol is NOT the cause of heart
disease.
If your physician is urging you to check your total cholesterol,
then you should know that this test will tell you virtually nothing
about your risk of heart disease, unless it is 330 or higher. HDL
percentage is a far more potent indicator for heart disease risk.
Here are the two ratios you should pay attention to:
HDL/Total Cholesterol Ratio: Should ideally be above 24 percent. If
below 10 percent, you have a significantly elevated risk for heart
disease.
Triglyceride/HDL Ratio: Should be below 2.
I have seen a number of people with total cholesterol levels over
250 who were actually at low risk for heart disease due to their
elevated HDL levels. Conversely, I have seen many people with
cholesterol levels under 200 who had a very high risk of heart
disease, based on their low HDL. Your body NEEDS cholesterol—it is
important in the production of cell membranes, hormones, vitamin D
and bile acids that help you to digest fat. Cholesterol also helps
your brain form memories and is vital to your neurological function.
There is also strong evidence that having too little cholesterol
INCREASES your risk for cancer, memory loss, Parkinson's disease,
hormonal imbalances, stroke, depression, suicide, and violent
behavior.
Statins Should NEVER Be Used By Pregnant
Women
One in four Americans over the age of 45 is now taking these drugs,
and few are properly warned about the related health risks. Part of
the problem is that many doctors are not even aware of all the
risks. A study published last spring highlighted this dilemma.
Most disturbingly, the researchers found that physicians were
lacking in awareness of the teratogenic risksiii (ability to cause
fetal malformations) of statins and other cardiovascular drugs they
prescribed for their pregnant patients. The study followed an
earlier report, which had concluded statins should be avoided in
early pregnancy due to their teratogenic capabilityiv . An even
earlier 2003 studyv had already established that cholesterol plays
an essential role in embryonic development, and that statins could
play a part in embryonic mutations or even death...
Indeed, it's difficult to look at these facts and not reach the
conclusion that the pharmaceutical industry is quite willing to
sacrifice human lives for profit. Statins are in fact classified as
a "pregnancy Category X medication" meaning, it causes serious birth
defects, and should NEVER be used by a woman who is pregnant or
planning a pregnancy.
Parents Beware: Outrageous Push to
Put Kids on Statin Drugs!
In a bold attempt to increase profits before the patent runs out,
Pfizer has introduced a chewable kid-friendly version of Lipitor.
Its US patent for Lipitor expired in November 2011, and seeking to
boost sales of the drug, children have become the new target market,
and the conventional medical establishment is more than happy to
oblige.
Researchers and many doctors are now calling for universal school
screening of children to check for high cholesterol, to find those
"in need of treatment." In addition, older siblings, parents and
other family members might be prompted to get screened as well, the
researchers say, which would uncover additional, previously
undiagnosed adults in need of the drug.
This is clearly NOT the way to improve public health. On the
contrary, it could produce a new, massive wave of extremely dire
health consequences in just a few years time.
So rather than improving school lunches, which would cost about a
dollar a day per child, they'd rather "invest" ten times that for
tests and drugs that in no way, shape, or form address the root
cause, which is an improper, unhealthy diet! All they're doing is
allowing all the industries to maintain or increase their profits:
Big Pharma; Big Sugar; Big Corn and the processed food industry.
Who pays?
You, and your children! And in far more ways than one!
Optimizing Your Cholesterol Levels,
Naturally
There's really no reason to take statins and suffer the damaging
health effects from these dangerous drugs. The fact is that 75
percent of your cholesterol is produced by your liver, which is
influenced by your insulin levels. Therefore, if you optimize your
insulin level, you will automatically optimize your cholesterol. It
follows, then, that my primary recommendations for safely regulating
your cholesterol have to do with modifying your diet and lifestyle:
Optimize your vitamin D levels. Research by Dr. Stephanie Seneff has
shed additional light on the extreme importance of appropriate sun
exposure for normalizing your cholesterol levels and preventing
heart disease. For more information, please see this previous
interview.
Reduce, with the plan of eliminating, grains and sugars in your
diet. Ideally, you'll also want to consume a good portion of your
food raw.
Make sure you are getting plenty of high quality, animal-based omega
3 fats, such as krill oil.
Other heart-healthy foods include olive oil, coconut and coconut
oil, organic raw dairy products and eggs, avocados, raw nuts and
seeds, and organic grass-fed meats as appropriate for your
nutritional type.
Exercise daily. Make sure you incorporate peak fitness exercises,
which also optimizes your human growth hormone (HGH) production.
Address your emotional challenges. My favorite technique for stress
management is the Emotional Freedom Technique (EFT).
Avoid smoking or drinking alcohol excessively.
Be sure to get plenty of good, restorative sleep.
Unlike statin drugs, which lower your cholesterol at the expense of
your health, these lifestyle strategies represent a holistic
approach that will benefit your overall health—which includes a
healthy cardiovascular system.
The Baycol Statin Recall and Safety Issue:
In August 2001, Bayer AG, the maker of Baycol (cerivastatin), a
popular cholesterol-lowering drug used by about 700,000 Americans,
pulled the medicine off the market after 31 people died from severe
muscle breakdown, a well-recognized side effect of
cholesterol-lowering drugs. Related articles follow:
Statins: Is the Danger in the Dose? Here is the hard data on Baycol-associated
adverse reactions. If you or someone you know is taking one of the
statin cholesterol-lowering drugs, this is a "must-read" article by
Jay Cohen, MD to help you understand the potential dangers that this
exposes you to.
Baycol Pulled From Market as Numerous Deaths Linked to It
Baycol, a cholestrol-lowering drug (statin), has been voluntarily
pulled off the market because of numerous deaths associated with its
use.
The Baycol Recall: How Safe is Your Statin?
With the recall of Baycol, patients are now searching out a new drug
to take its place, but are other statins really safe? Here are some
precautions necessary for anyone taking Baycol or any statin.
Baycol: Another Fluoride Drug Bites the Dust
Baycol is just one of many fluoride drugs to be pulled from the
market due to health hazards posed. Read about this and some of the
others in this informative article written by Andreas Schuld and
Wendy Small.
BMJ: Bayer faces potential fine over cholesterol lowering drug
Bayer might have to pay a fine to the German government of about
$23,400 for withholding from the German authorities information on
the drug's potentially fatal interaction with another drug.
Lipitor Tied to Liver, Kidney Injury, as Well as Muscle Damage
It seems that Baycol is not alone among cholesterol lowering drugs
in posing serious dangers to the public. A number of legal actions
are also being pursued against Pfizer Inc., the manufacturer of the
Lipitor.
Excerpts from Public Citizen's Health Research Group's Petition to
Require a Box Warning on All HMG-CoA Reductase Inhibitors ("Statins"):
" ... Public Citizen, representing 135,000 consumers nationwide,
hereby petitions the FDA pursuant to the Federal Food, Drug and
Cosmetic Act 21, U.S.C. Section 355(e)(3), and C.F.R. 10.30, to add
a black box warning and additional consistent bolded warnings about
this serious problem to the label of all statins marketed in the
United States."
"Doctors and the public must be warned to immediately discontinue
use of statin drugs at the onset of muscle pain, muscle tenderness,
muscle weakness or tiredness."
"Prompt cessation of the use of statins at the first sign of muscle
pain, muscle tenderness, muscle weakness or tiredness and prompt
evaluation by a physician including a blood test for creatine
phosphokinase (a measure of muscle destruction) may avoid the
progression to more extensive muscle damage, rhabdomyolysis and
death."
"Rhabdomyolysis has been reported with all statins currently
marketed in the United States."