Blaming cholesterol med for achy muscles – Chicago Sun-Times

by Symptom Advice on February 1, 2011

Blaming cholesterol med for achy muscles

BY MICHAEL ROIZEN AND MEHMET OZ Jan 31, 2011 06:02PM

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Q. I take the minimum dose of the statin drug simvastatin once a day for my cholesterol. I used to take Crestor. Simvastatin doesn’t do as good a job ­­­— my LDL is still a little high and my HDL is a little low — but Crestor made my muscles ache. is there a way to avoid taking a bigger dose of simvastatin? a. At the Cleveland Clinic, where Dr. Mike works, a novel regimen is being used to help people like you, who get achy from powerful statins (Crestor’s one) but who aren’t helped enough by milder statins.

The new Cleveland approach is a spin on combination therapy: You continue your usual daily low dose of simvastatin, then twice a week (say on Tuesday and Saturday) add a low dose (5 mg) of rosuvastatin (Crestor).

This regimen gives your heart-healthy HDL cholesterol a major boost while lowering lousy, artery-clogging LDL by 80 percent — all without causing muscle aches.

(You may be able to stop the simvastatin if the low dose of Crestor is enough.) Talk to your doc about this.

Most docs in our Wellness Institute also advise coenzyme Q10, 200 mg a day, every day, to help decrease the risk of muscle pain.

Q. I’ve been on a statin drug for a couple of years, and my cholesterol is still going up, even though I’ve become a vegetarian. My doctor just upped my statin dose. I’m “of a certain age,” so could perimenopause have anything to do with it?

a. Maybe. Starting to go through “the change” changes more than just your periods and your internal thermostat.

On average, lousy cholesterol jumps 10.5 points, or about 9 percent, as women journey through menopause, found the Study of Women’s Health across the Nation.

But it also could be a number of other things. First, get your thyroid checked.

Some menopausal symptoms (hot flashes, dry skin, mood swings, weight gain) also are signs of an over- or underactive thyroid. plus, an impaired thyroid can make your cholesterol wacky.

A sluggish thyroid, for example, may raise lousy LDL cholesterol as well as triglycerides, and may put you in the queue for heart disease and high blood pressure. New studies suggest that this can happen even if your thyroid is only a bit off.

Ironically, your cholesterol troubles also could be from your vegetarian diet. if you replaced meat with a lot of full-fat cheese, milk, yogurt and baked goods, you’re still eating a lot of saturated fat, which sends cholesterol soaring.

Q. I recently had a thyroid test that came back abnormal. My doctor says it may be a false positive because I’m on a statin drug. what does one have to do with the other?

a. a couple of years ago, a group of Texas researchers played a hunch and took a second look at more than 300 people with low thyroid stimulating hormone, a sign of an overactive thyroid gland. When they ran a more specialized test (a radioactive iodine scan), about half of those taking a statin drug turned out to have normal thyroids.

Most of those not taking statins really did have overactive thyroids, which can cause heart palpitations, anxiety, muscle weakness and sleep problems.

Statins may lower TSH without actually affecting thyroid function, and that could be what your doc suspects happened to you.

It’s worth asking your doc for a more specialized test.

To submit questions, go to RealAge.com.

King Features Syndicate

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