Lesleywo
Well-Known Member
- Messages
- 714
- Location
- Southern Highlands, Australia
- Type of diabetes
- LADA
- Treatment type
- Diet only
- Dislikes
- My addiction to carbs
I am seeing a new endo next week so I will run it past him, see what he says.You do know that high cholesterol and in particular high LDL is a sign of hypothyroidism? You may benefit from tweaking you thyroid meds a bit.
I think @Indy51 has information on middle aged women and cholesterol?
I am seeing a new endo next week so I will run it past him, see what he says.
Thanks @Totto.
There's a long poll thread on the forums and I posted a few links there on the subject of statins and women that you might want to look at: http://www.diabetes.co.uk/forum/threads/poll-side-effects-from-statins.58409/page-5#post-558202
Dr Kendrick has also just published an article on the subject of low cholesterol and all cause mortality as we age, ie the lower the cholesterol, the higher the risk of death: http://drmalcolmkendrick.org/2015/05/18/hats-off-to-the-japanese/
I have attributed this rise to doing LCHF for some time and the increase in saturated fat.
I have a family history of heart disease; my father had a heart bypass at age 58 (a year older than me).
So, the doc is wanting me on Crestor as he reckons I have a 1 in 5 chance of having a heart attack over the next 5 years (thanks for that cheery news .. not).
But at the same time he is telling me one of the side effects of Crestor is an increased risk of diabetes! Over the last 12 months I've 'reversed' my insulin resistance (if that's possible) and lost 9kg. So I read up on Crestor and as well as the muscle pain and diabetes, also an increased risk of cancer. I honestly feel 'damned if I do, damned if I don't'. I don't feel at all comfortable taking statins; even a cardiologist once told me 'stay from statins, mark my words, in 10 years time all this statin nonsense will come crashing down around our ears'. But then again, on the other hand, I don't really fancy a heart attack either!
Any thoughts?
Only you can decide if you want to take them or not . Statins are a can of worms on here and always generate a lot of responses. Some are adamant they would never take them, some have had side effects and stopped them and others take them quite happily with no problems at all
. . . . . GP checking my risk factor for heart attack on a chart on his laptop was using a bit of a 'one size fits all approach'. We are all unique and our bodies work in different ways.
thanks Squire, good to get first hand experience. I am very much swaying against them. The only time in the last 7 or so years that my cholesterol has been 'good' (as in, no asterisks against any of the levels) was when I was following a FODMAPS diet for irritable bowel syndrome. The stand out there was all the oats/oatbran I was eating. It was the only glutenous grain I was allowed to have, so even my bread was made from oats. Consequently I've made up some walnut & raisin oatran muffins like I used to eat in those days and thankfully they are very kind to blood sugar levels. Usually a drop from previous meal.I admit to being biased against taking statins. The is not an unreasoned fear of them, in fact I took them for some years and was never so ill as during that period of my life. It included being unable to walk for two separate monthly periods, upper body rigidity and finally something like gastro enteritis.
I am writing this because the people that "take them quite happily with no problems at all" may yet suffer from the possible long term effects but have no way of knowing yet. Once again I trot out Steph who says.
"People on long-term statin therapy start to notice that their hair is receding faster, they're developing cataracts, they can't hear as well as they used to, they keep forgetting things, they can't open the pickle jar any more, and perhaps they'll need rotator cuff surgery soon, as their shoulders are so sore. They think it's just because they're growing old, but these are all side effects that my research, together with my students at MIT, has uncovered, by comparing statin drug side effects with side effects associated with other drugs in age-matched reviews."
The full text is here
http://www.spacedoc.com/why_statins_do_more_harm_than_good
Hi Graj0If you look at the risk assessment that the GP is supposed to use, you have to enter several variables to calculate the risk assessment, so I don't know how a chart can represent that.
If it was just a chart, I'd be asking some more questions, but then I've met a few GPs who shouldn't have been trusted. I'm even a little cautious with the three smashing GPs at the practice that I now go to.
Have a go at http://www.qrisk.org/ it'll only take a minute and if you want the background to how they do it have a read of http://www.qrisk.org/BMJ-QRISK2.pdf.
Hi Graj0
I did the risk assessment as per the link above ... result said 5.8% in next 10 years. http://www.qrisk.org/index.php
I fiddled around with the info I input (apart from stuff I can't change, like family history) and to get my healthy heart age to 58 my Chol/HDL ratio would have to be 2 and I'd have to lose 9kg. Interestingly, the risk factors listed were the negatives, as in smoking, diabetes, kidney disease, blood pressure etc. Funny there were no questions like do you exercise regularly, do you meditate, how many pieces of fruit do you eat a day? (I did a nutrition course and I did an assignment on high cholesterol and one of the findings was with each piece of fresh fruit a day your risk of heart disease reduces). Seems as though they aren't taking everything into consideration?
Yes that could be right but it will depend on the individual some people will take them for years and will never have any adverse effects and others will after a relatively short time . I am 76 and have been taking statins for the last 8 years never had any side effects and I haven't got any of the problems you listed but maybe I will in the future who knows only time will tell.I admit to being biased against taking statins. The is not an unreasoned fear of them, in fact I took them for some years and was never so ill as during that period of my life. It included being unable to walk for two separate monthly periods, upper body rigidity and finally something like gastro enteritis.
I am writing this because the people that "take them quite happily with no problems at all" may yet suffer from the possible long term effects but have no way of knowing yet. Once again I trot out Steph who says.
"People on long-term statin therapy start to notice that their hair is receding faster, they're developing cataracts, they can't hear as well as they used to, they keep forgetting things, they can't open the pickle jar any more, and perhaps they'll need rotator cuff surgery soon, as their shoulders are so sore. They think it's just because they're growing old, but these are all side effects that my research, together with my students at MIT, has uncovered, by comparing statin drug side effects with side effects associated with other drugs in age-matched reviews."
The full text is here
http://www.spacedoc.com/why_statins_do_more_harm_than_good
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