The problem is that there i precious little funding for independant research. Virtually all research for diabetes is funded by Big Pharma, and is never independant. I remember reading the actual lab results from the roziglitizone trials done for licence application. It showed that there were some fatalities during the trials, but when the licence was applied for, this info had been written out. Also the target patients had been carefully selected to provide 'justification' for omitting any deaths from the report.There are conflicting pieces of research but that is often to do with the type of research - small study versus a very large prospective study or, indeed, research that looks at the combination of many research studies.
I most certainly say that rigorous research is better than straw polls. I would not do research, be a research subject or spend time advising on diabetes and other research if I thought otherwise.
Doug
I have been on a statin since 1998. I was part of the ASCOT trial: http://www.ascotstudy.org/en@Osidge , do you take statins.?
I have been on a statin since 1998. I was part of the ASCOT trial: http://www.ascotstudy.org/en
Doug
@DavidGrahamJones I was a patient in the ASCOT trial that looked at statins and mortality outcomes. That arm of the study was closed earlier than the blood pressure arm as there was overwhelming evidence of decreased mortality.http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18175773
Doug
@DavidGrahamJones The problem with polls is that it is often the people who have been unfortunate to have side effects or those who have googled and think that because there might be side effects then there will be side effects. The power of the mind is such that some people will experience side effects because they believe that they will have them.
Doug
I had an immediate lowering of my cholesterol on beginning treatment and on a recent but different piece of clinical research, involving cardiac MRIs and artery ultrasounds, I was found to have no deposits in my heart and all my arteries had no thickening. Another important point - I am not dead and I have not had a stroke!Positive personal benefits from statin use with no side effects.. Can you elaborate?
No. It was not ethical to keep that arm of the study open once the health benefits had been established. One of the golden rules.They got the result they were looking for and then closed the study early - in case the longer term results weren't as good maybe?
Why is it illogical to claim that some people may have had the side effect equivalent to the placebo effect? I have never claimed that some people do not get side effects from statins. That is well documented on the patient information leaflets and existing research: http://www.nhs.uk/news/2010/05May/Pages/side-effects-of-statins-studied.aspx and http://www.webmd.com/diabetes/news/20150304/statins-linked-to-raised-risk-of-type-2-diabetesEqually, some people do not know that the symptoms they experience are due to a drug they have been taking for months or years. Especially if the symptoms develop slowly over time.
With statins, the well documented contraindications include muscle aches, raised blood glucose and increased risk of diabetes.
Anyone who started statins prior to developing diabetes may have developed diabetes as a result of the statins. Or not. But it is illogical to claim that they couldn't have done, or that their condition may be psychosomatic.
Everyone should make informed choices about taking any drug. Again, let me repeat, I have never said that statins do not have side effects for a small percentage of those with diabetes. If you do not want to take them because you might have side effects then that is your choice.@Osidge, clearly you are in favour of stations which is cool. That alone doesn't make them safe. Far more than any other drug on the market, statins divide opinion not only with those who take them but those that prescribe them too. There is no evidence available as yet that would convince me they are safe get they are the most widely prescribed drug in the world. It worries me....
You would not usually want to lower your HDL. Have you been diagnosed with a particular form of high cholesterol such as familial hypercholesterolemia?I have tried most of the branded statins at some time over the last 10 years, all had the same result:- No reduction in lipid panel, but debilitaing arm and shoulder pain after the first week or so. I have had a background Ezetemibe dose for some time, but again it does not seem to help lower the HDL. Have now given up on all of them, and doing LCHF diet instead, will know next week if it has had any effect.
Interesting in what way, @Mike D? I am not so sure of the scientific value of this sort of poll.
Doug
What do you call a "small percentage" and where do you get your numbers ? There are quite a few on this thread alone who would disagree. The internet is full of stories of people suffering muscle pains and worse. It seems to me it may be a little more than a small percentage but I have no evidence, I just read and listen to others which gives me an informed decision.Everyone should make informed choices about taking any drug. Again, let me repeat, I have never said that statins do not have side effects for a small percentage of those with diabetes. If you do not want to take them because you might have side effects then that is your choice.
Doug
I would like to know who funded ASCOT. The link you posted only goes to an abstract page, and I have not been able to get hold of the main body text. The funding link it displays is not comprehensive, so I cannot deduce who provided funding. However, to provide monitoring on 10,000 individual cases for 3.3 years does not come cheap. As I understand it, there is a strong indication that it came from Pfizer, the manufacturer of Avorstatin. No one else has sufficient interest in proving that statins are safe for ALL to use. The only other player who might have stepped in is NICE, and they did not until recently have the powers to generate funds for research. In the latest NICE guidelines, they now have legal powers to 'encourage' manufacturers to perform safety tests at their own expense. So I still maintain that it is difficult to find funding for large scale trials by truly independant labs outside the major manufacturers., Simple logic says that noone else has the inclination or funds to do it. It is beyond the means of charity, and crowdsourcing is unlikely to raise the capital in order to prove a negative that results in taking a lucrative drug off the market.@Oldvatr It is untrue that virtually all research for diabetes is funded by big pharma. What made you think that it was?
Doug
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