Additionally, according to a 2011 study published in the journal Prostate, men who
take statin drugs of any kind are significantly more prone to developing prostate cancer compared to other men.
Researchers in the Netherlands used mathematical models to figure out the likely boost in life expectancy of 2,428 participants aged 55 and older
who took statins for 10 years or more.
But SAD is not whole and real foods such as animal or plant foods, or real fat even saturated... Then we get the false cholesterol scare and countless of
people take statin drug which even creates more damages.
Even though grapefruits alone don't do much, the researchers suggest that people might be more likely to stick with them than cholesterol - lowering drugs, noting that most people with heart disease
stop taking their statin drugs within a couple years, because of the adverse side effects, whereas grapefruit alone don't have any side effects.
A famous Danish study of neuropathy as a side effect to statin use concluded that an individual who is a long - term user of statin drugs has anywhere from 4 to 14 times greater risk of developing peripheral neuropathy than a person who does
not take statin drugs.
Patients whose statin therapy was discontinued — that is,
patients taking a statin as an outpatient prior to experiencing a hemorrhagic stroke who did not receive a statin as an inpatient — had a mortality rate of 57.8 percent compared with a mortality rate of 18.9 percent for patients using a statin before and during hospitalization.
Half the statins used worldwide are used in the United States, and that was before the 2001 and 2004 updates of the National Cholesterol Education Program recommended more than tripling the number of
Americans taking statin therapy.
Ideally, it is better to make those lifestyle changes and avoid
taking statins if possible.»
Some people experience memory loss, report an inability to concentrate, or feel that they are developing Alzheimer's disease
when taking statin drugs.
A link between diabetes and statins wasn't discovered until a 2008 analysis of almost 18,000 people published in the New England Journal of Medicine, which found that 216 people taking a placebo developed type 2 diabetes while 270
taking a statin did.
Those who ate more than 16 g of whole grains like quinoa every day had lower non-HDL cholesterol levels than those who
took the statins without eating the whole grains.
I'll leave the decision on whether to go ahead and
take statins as a precautionary measure up to you and your Doctor but if you follow these requirements strictly you should see your cholesterol start to drop fairly quickly and will be able to see the extent to which you can lower it.
In one routine - care study, reported in 2013 in Annals of Internal Medicine, 8 percent of patients stopped
taking statins because of side effects.
New results from the clinical trial program, SPIRE (Studies of PCSK9 Inhibition and the Reduction of Vascular Events), which sought to determine the effect of bococizumab, a PCSK9 inhibitor, on LDL cholesterol levels and clinical outcomes in high - risk patients already
taking statin therapy, were presented at the 2017 American College of Cardiology Scientific Sessions and simultaneously published in two manuscripts in the New England Journal of Medicine.
A systematic review of the cases reported to the FDA determined that approximately half of the memory loss problems occurred within 60 days of starting on statin therapy, although memory problems were reported
after taking a statin drug for just 5 days.
Compared to men who have
never taken a statin drug, statin users were found to have a much as an 86 percent increased risk of developing prostate cancer.
A phase 2 clinical trial recruited 497 patients with high cholesterol, 73 percent of which were
already taking statins, the current standard treatment for those at risk of cardiovascular disease.
Doctors are less inclined to direct a patient to stop
taking statin medication because of the former two symptoms (since heart disease and strokes are much more serious afflictions), but developing diabetes is obviously problematic also, so good awareness and consistent checkups and blood sugar testing should be standard when taking these medications.
He
now takes statins, cholesterol - lowering drugs that are the top - selling medications in the United States, because he has heard from friends in the pharmaceutical industry that statins could prevent the onset of Alzheimer's.
To each his own, but personally, not only would I never
ever take a statin, I would never take red yeast rice either.
However, during the non-blinded phase of the study, muscle - related symptoms were 41 % more common among people
taking statins compared to those who weren't (1.26 % vs 1.00 % per year respectively).
«Older
women taking statins face higher risk of diabetes: Older women taking cholesterol - lowering statins face a significantly increased risk of developing diabetes.»
Allott said that high saturated fat content in the diet contributes to raised blood cholesterol levels, and the researchers also found in the study that
men taking statins, which are drugs used to control cholesterol levels, had weaker associations between saturated fat intake and prostate cancer aggressiveness.
Under current guidelines, about 50 million people in the United States should
consider taking statins to lower cholesterol and prevent heart attacks.
«Data suggests that for people without heart disease only 1 in 100 is likely to benefit
from taking statin drugs» according to Businessweek.
Of those told their results, around 57 per cent decided to start
taking statins again within the next three months, compared with only a third of those who received generic recommendations.
The most thorough study to date had some 3,000 men with «high» cholesterol
levels take a statin every day for five years, while 3,000 similar men took a placebo.
Yet, it is this senior population that is bamboozled
into taking statin drugs to damage their health outcomes.
However, 10 to 20 percent of patients
taking statins report muscle - related symptoms including aches, pains and cramps that prevent the use of recommended doses.
One study from an international team of researchers, published in JAMA in 2016, found that among people who previously complained of problems
with taking statins, 43 percent developed muscle pain after taking the drug in the study, atorvastatin, compared with 27 percent who took a dummy pill.
Thus, the strengths of Gupta and colleagues» study lie in the fact that these were the same patients, no run - in period existed to exclude patients intolerant to therapy, and few patients had
previously taken any statins.
Yet more than three - quarters of people
taking statins take them for primary prevention — meaning that many patients stand to gain no benefit at all.
He calculated that for people who have already had a heart attack or heart disease,
taking statins over five years would lead to 10 % fewer heart events while those who are at high risk of having a heart attack but haven't had one yet would enjoy 5 % fewer events over that time.
Sounds like you are
taking a statin purely by choice thinking that it may help you live longer by avoiding or delaying a heart event, but it certainly is not needed to keep you alive or out of pain today.
When patients were unaware they were
taking statins there was no reported increase in muscle - related symptoms.
«We found that almost 50 per cent of women in their late seventies and eighties in the
study took statins, and five per cent were diagnosed with new - onset diabetes,» Dr Jones said.
Patients who have
difficulty taking statins have a high risk of cardiovascular events, resulting in higher health care costs.
In addition, younger patients and those with a history of smoking were more likely to have
continued taking statins through the period of the study.
«Statins save lives of people with high levels of LDL cholesterol: Analysis of previous studies involving more than 270,000 people finds those who have high levels of LDL should feel
safe taking statins.»