I think there may be a lot in the last line of yours Annelise, the big companies are pushing them.I have cast my vote with a yes.
The first statin I was pushed on some years ago (can't recall its name) gave me a muddled memory and kind of a low mood - not something I wanted in my then very active working life where I was constantly on. I went off it myself (didn't actually tell my doctor at the time).
Next time was when I had my diabetes diagnosis. My doctor (or rather his young temp) - insisted on my taking statins (this time Simvastatin). After two weeks, my feet and legs had become elephantine and with large red areas of blotches. The temp argued that I should learn to live with this. I flat refused though.
I was then put on another statin (Ezetrol) - but by then having had so bad experiences with statins, I started scouring the internet for more information. This made me choose to discontinue statins.
Anyway, I found that a slightly higher level of cholesterol in women 'of a certain age' is in fact beneficial - who would have thought that! Anyway, we produce up to 90% of our cholesterols ourselves irrespective of fat intake or statins.
I have read that in the US, the official recommendations are now that all diabetics shall routinely be prescribed statins. (Are big pharma in play here?)
annelise
All statins do this to your muscles and it also causes memory loss. When i asked my Doc about this , as i thought I was getting early dementia, he said its ok they do that but its not permanent . I then went on to remind him that he had told me I have to take statins for the rest of my life so surely that makes it permanent !!! I have been on Pravastatin for years now and also suffer muscle pains etc to the point that it has disabled me but then I was diagnosed with Fibromyalgia which has the same symptoms so what do I believe ?I've only recently started Simvastatin, and I've been having pains in both my legs. My calf muscles feel tight, just like they do when you've done a lot of exercise.
On just reading the leaflet inside the box it seems this is a side effect, and warrants discontinuing the medicine, as it can cause muscle deterioration. Maybe I just should stop taking it and try to reduce the cholesterol through diet
2.7, that is far too low. Cholesterol is something we need. It is vital for us! Talk to your Dr about it and do some reading. High cholesterol might be bad, but too low is bad too.I've been on Simvastatin 40mg for several years, with no apparent side effects. However since being diagnosed with diabetes last year and going on a low carb diet in January this year my cholesterol level's gone down from just under 5 to 2.7. I asked my doctor in view of this whether I could stop taking it and he's said no, "because there are other benefits"...
I'm due to have a diabetic review next month with the practice diabetic nurse and doctor, so will try again with him. I'm happy to take medication if there's a good reason to do so, but now I don't believe there is any longer, so I really don't see the point. I'd sooner they spent this money on giving me test strips for my meter, which in my mind would be more beneficial to me.
Robbity
Ye Gods yes, first prescribed Simvastatin as a "precaution" some years ago, which being a good girl, I took. Within a month I was wracked with pain and could hardly walk . GP couldn't find a cause but said that it was unlikely to be the statins . Not being convinced I stopped taking them and the pain vanished in 48 hours. ( my cholesterol was within the normal range at the time of them being prescribed )
The second time I had slightly raised cholesterol for two consecutive tests, and my diabetes had been poorly controlled for a while. I refused statins because of my previous experience and held out for a while but was more or less bullied into trying Atorvastatin (spelling?)
My BG went through the roof almost straight away despite nothing else changing, the pain in my legs returned with bells on so after one month I stopped taking them . My BG went down, the pain stopped and my GP was convinced I was blaming the statins for poor dietary control , the pain on sod knows what and told me I increased my risk of heart problems by 24% by stopping them !
That made me try taking plant sterols instead, and my last cholesterol was just fineWhether it is the plant sterols or low carbing , I don't know. Incidentally, at both times of taking statins, I was unaware that people had been having problems with them, so it certainly wasn't psychosomatic.
Apparently there is something in the leaflet that comes with Atorvastatin that it can raise BG, though my GP has said that this side effect is "unknown"
Signy
Muffy
I was never aware of the antibiotic issue, and so sad that you have been immobilised from the bad reactions.
This is something why I wonder why so many people (like I was) are being diagnosed with fibromyalgia..
The thigh pain and legand back pain etc I totally agree with. Whilst living in Wales I was on full DLA and barely able to get out of bed and walked with sticks. This was pretty much statin time..
Came off and pains eventually disappeared for a year. Put back on statins but pains came back, were so severe I got up (or rather fell down) from bed, crawled to barhroom and admitted to hospital where they diagnosed diabetic amyotrophy. Which has now been un diagnosed from the EMG tests.
Now although I still have some pains in my muscles of legs, the only way I get out of the pain barrier is to really use my legs digging and gardening and walking. The more I do, the better reaction from my legs and body. This morn with the rain, I'm in agony sat down, but as soon as I walk and move and especially gardening the better I am.
Fibromyalgia, amyotrophy have effectively been undiagnosed, but nobody will admit from NHS that this is statin damage.
The NHS are supposed to do tests after people have been put on statins.. Did you have these tests done? And like me, supposedly no reaction to statins?
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