As the OP has/is losing weight this may be skewing his figures so I agree, still a lot more consideration needsto be done before making any final decision.I also understand your dilemma. However, in your shoes I wouldn't take the statins without knowing the full breakdown of my cholesterol. If it happens your cholesterol and lipids are all normal there seems little point in trying to reduce them. If they are higher than normal, then you have a lot of thinking to do. I would wait for the blood test results (and make sure you get a print out!)
What a great outcome, well done.Hi Jo,
I was diagnosed diabetic when I went into hospital following a heart attack. I was advised to walk every day (for my heart).
When I started doing this I found that after a few hundred yards I would get acute pains in my calves and feet.
Went for check up and the consultant said yes I had PAD but it was not severe enough to operate.
Bottom line is I carried on walking through the pain for the next couple of years. After 12 months the pain stopped in one leg and six months later the other leg stopped hurting. This was through what they call complementary circulation where the other vessels in the legs increase in size to take the load off the partially blocked arteries.
I did take statins during that period but my feeling is that it was the exercise not the statins (and getting my BG under control) that helped cure the condition.
I can now walk 10 miles or more without any pain.
I hope this helps and good luck with the walking!
Pete
As far as I understand (and I'm no expert at all) there are various options depending on the degree of PAD.What operation is it you guys are referring to to cure PAD?
I was referred to a vascular specialist by my (excellent) podiatrist due to some lack of sensation in feet and chilly feet and lower legs. Plus I have muscle pain in calves, buttocks and thighs while exercising, particularly uphill. But since going on new dietary regime walking has improved, and pain has lessened, I suspect largely due to not carting around an extra 20-odd pounds (10 + kilos). I have a physical job, particularly for the past 8 months or so, and cope well with that.
Vascular specialist suspects PVD (or PAD peripheral arterial disease) around the groin area as I'm getting pain from the waist down. He is sending me for further tests to confirm diagnosis before deciding what treatment they can offer. He said that they may perform an angioplasty under local anaesthetic or more intrusively, a bypass.
Now the dilemma – he told me to take aspirin, which is OK, to help thin my blood a little.
Then he told me I was go on a statin to lower (control) my cholesterol, which will be prescribed by my doctor when he receives the report from the specialist. This I am less keen on.
He doesn't think things are too urgent because he wants to see if there is improvement in the next couple of months after aspirin and statin.
He also ordered a full blood screen too which was taken at the time which may throw something else up.
I am on a (very) low carb diet, have been losing weight nicely and my self-administered BG levels seem OK. I'm not due for my first HbA1c test since T2 diagnosis for another month and feel that I want to give the new dietary regime chance to work on everything including cholesterol levels / ratios.
I told the specialist that I had refused a stain on T2 diagnosis but he was pretty insistent that I take one for this unrelated condition. BUT although the cause may be unrelated, the management of it may not be. In other words I think it all revolves around cholesterol, insulin and blood sugar control and the clogging effect they have on arteries
Now I know how some of you feel about statins, I also read that some of you take them, and have done so, for years. Personally I am against taking them but when a specialist recommends them for this newly diagnosed condition I have to try and understand things properly.
I've listened to Ivor Cummins and just read a Zoe Harcombe article on cholesterol (and subsequent q and a). Against their theories is a vascular specialist who looked me in the eye and told me how to proceed (a big lad he was too!).
Sorry this is a ramble and I realize that you can't offer medical advice but not only would I value your input but it may be relevant to others too.
Hi, have you tried taking Alpha Lipoic Acid suppliments for your legs. It helps to lower your sugar levels eases peripheral pain. I take it when my legs are really bad. Can be a bit hard to stomach sometimes so don't take on an empty stomach. I've also started taking vitamin B12, Magnesium and D spray. The ALA is 600 MG a day. So take 3 in the morning and 3 in the evening. I take Vitamin D in he Morning and the B12 and Magnesium with my evening Metformin tablet. IF you ever need a chat I'm South Side of Manchester near the Airport.
Hello BJ, thanks for that. Not tried r-ala but am seriously considering it.
To be honest the pain isn't too bad and if I stop for a minute it clears up. But as I said earlier, there is definitely some circulatory problem.
Though I may be making a mistake by not taking anything else (apart from an Aspirin, which makes sense), I am trying to get to the point where my BS are properly stabilized, then see where I am. (no meds, just diet)
This PAD is a new complication and there is far less info on it compared to diabetes which, with the help of folks here, I can hopefully get a handle on.
PAD advice has been, Aspirin and statins immediately - this is where my uncertainty lies.
Not wanting to bore anybody but it looks like the specialist wants to see what effect those two have before a follow-up appointment scheduled for early January.
My dilemma basically is Aspirin and Statin or Aspirin, no statin and very close BS control.
What I need is some proper understanding from Doc and nurse when I go and see them.
What I intend to do is try and present them with some evidence and hope to have an informed, unbiased consultation rather than standard, blinkered advice. I suspect I'll be banging my head against a wall till my HCPs get revised guidelines from the powers that be - how likely is that??
Do you have PAD BJ? Perhaps I'll send you a private message if that's OK?
Hello BJ, thanks for that. Not tried r-ala but am seriously considering it.
To be honest the pain isn't too bad and if I stop for a minute it clears up. But as I said earlier, there is definitely some circulatory problem.
Though I may be making a mistake by not taking anything else (apart from an Aspirin, which makes sense), I am trying to get to the point where my BS are properly stabilized, then see where I am. (no meds, just diet)
This PAD is a new complication and there is far less info on it compared to diabetes which, with the help of folks here, I can hopefully get a handle on.
PAD advice has been, Aspirin and statins immediately - this is where my uncertainty lies.
Not wanting to bore anybody but it looks like the specialist wants to see what effect those two have before a follow-up appointment scheduled for early January.
My dilemma basically is Aspirin and Statin or Aspirin, no statin and very close BS control.
What I need is some proper understanding from Doc and nurse when I go and see them.
What I intend to do is try and present them with some evidence and hope to have an informed, unbiased consultation rather than standard, blinkered advice. I suspect I'll be banging my head against a wall till my HCPs get revised guidelines from the powers that be - how likely is that??
Do you have PAD BJ? Perhaps I'll send you a private message if that's OK?
PAD advice has been, Aspirin and statins immediately - this is where my uncertainty lies.
Not wanting to bore anybody but it looks like the specialist wants to see what effect those two have before a follow-up appointment scheduled for early January.
My dilemma basically is Aspirin and Statin or Aspirin, no statin and very close BS control.
What I need is some proper understanding from Doc and nurse when I go and see them.
I suspect the two drugs are for different things:Hello BJ, thanks for that. Not tried r-ala but am seriously considering it.
To be honest the pain isn't too bad and if I stop for a minute it clears up. But as I said earlier, there is definitely some circulatory problem.
Though I may be making a mistake by not taking anything else (apart from an Aspirin, which makes sense), I am trying to get to the point where my BS are properly stabilized, then see where I am. (no meds, just diet)
This PAD is a new complication and there is far less info on it compared to diabetes which, with the help of folks here, I can hopefully get a handle on.
PAD advice has been, Aspirin and statins immediately - this is where my uncertainty lies.
Not wanting to bore anybody but it looks like the specialist wants to see what effect those two have before a follow-up appointment scheduled for early January.
My dilemma basically is Aspirin and Statin or Aspirin, no statin and very close BS control.
What I need is some proper understanding from Doc and nurse when I go and see them.
What I intend to do is try and present them with some evidence and hope to have an informed, unbiased consultation rather than standard, blinkered advice. I suspect I'll be banging my head against a wall till my HCPs get revised guidelines from the powers that be - how likely is that??
Do you have PAD BJ? Perhaps I'll send you a private message if that's OK?
Statins can actually cause plague regression (even in the heart,) takes a little time though, and also help plague to stabilise and reduce plague fragmentation and subsequent break off and occlusion.
I have a leaking heart valve, doctor put me on yet another tablet to slow my heart down. I have the symptoms of neuropathy but pulses in legs are fine. My chiropodist said sometimes the damage is not the nerves in the feet, but muddled up signals in the brain..Please feel free to message me Jo
I suspect the two drugs are for different thin
Aspirin is an anti platelet drug. With a narrow lumined, plague filled vessel it is much more likely to block the lumen by clot formation, aspirin helps stop the platelets aggregating.
Statins can actually cause plague regression (even in the heart,) takes a little time though, and also help plague to stabilise and reduce plague fragmentation and subsequent break off and occlusion.
Calf/thigh pain that eases on resting is most characteristic, it's called intermittent claudication.
You may turn up some information by searching for PVD, peripheral vascular disease, as it is still known to many as this.
Good luck on your journey.
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