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New US Diet Guidelines: What Not to Eat
Instead of just giving Americans a list of healthy food choices, the federal government takes a stab at showing us what not to eat. Get the facts here.
policosanol with coq10 has only a couple of side effects but none life threatening ,but only take 5mg for 3 weeks then increase to 10mg .i have just increased to 20mg fingers crossed in january my results will be good .but my thigh muscles are wrecked because of statins and i will prove its them .good luck everyone
Many studies have been done and the results are the same. Statins have a higher benefit than risk which is why they are so often prescribed. It's all about numbers.
And I have seen comment by several doctors that indicate that they test their patient for vit D levels and treat that before prescribing statins. And they claim that they have very few that have problems with statins.
I would agree with you that the problem of statin induced myopathy is under reported, and the research is more toward selling the product. Financial conflicts of interest run high, especially when a product is a Block Buster cash machine.
http://www.ccjm.org/content/78/6/393.long
One can also see that these drugs are the most widely prescribed drugs ever marketed, with 80 million people on the drugs currently, or in the recent past. These muscle problems have been widely known for over a decade, but the Standard of Care continues to be these drugs, when some studies suggest that the same benefits could be obtained from a bowl of oatmeal each morning. At the very least, someone should be doing more research on these side effects, since so many people are now on these drugs.
If they work for you, great, but I would caution you to be aware of these side effects, look for them to materialize, and respond quickly to them should they in fact happen.
Why is the Standard of Care so inflexible in cases such as mine? Why is there not some patient related flexibility built into the Standard of Care? I am told that family docs can get into trouble for not prescribing these drugs, when the Cleveland Clinic study linked above shows that up to 60% of patients have to go off the drugs because of these kinds of problems within two years. Have the drug companies so influenced the Standard of Care, that obvious patient related problems like these cannot be excluded? If so, then the drug companies influence is over done, and should be reduced, IMHO.
The drug companies stack the NIH with their members, or those complacent in their positions..........but who speaks for the patient?
The same goes for the NHS............but who speaks for the patient?
The patient and his/her care is lost in these dicsussions, or so it seems to this patient.
What I fail to yet understand, is how can these statin drugs, continue to be the Standard of Care, with all of the evidence stacking up against them. The article from the Cleveland Clinic, says that up to 60% of patients on statins will have muscle problems within 2 years, and yet we continue to make these drugs the Standard of Care? I am not a doctor, but there is something obviously wrong with the Standard of Care standards, when this obvious over treatment with statin drugs is allowed to continue without questions about who sets the Standard...........and what are their financial interests in the results of the Standards. It was one thing before these problems were realized, but these drugs have now been on the market so long that most have now gone generic. My original problems were 11 years ago. How long is the medical community going to wait to investigate this obvious oversight and under reporting of this problem?
Looking forward to some names, you must have them to make that statement, right?
The patient is responsible for their treatment, no one else.
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