Dangers of Statin
Drugs: What You Haven’t Been Told About Popular Cholesterol-Lowering
Medicines
By
Sally Fallon and Mary G. Enig, PhD
Hypercholesterolemia is
the
health issue of the 21st century. It is actually an invented disease,
a “problem” that emerged when health professionals learned how to
measure cholesterol levels in the blood. High cholesterol exhibits no
outward signs—unlike other conditions of the blood, such as diabetes
or anemia, diseases that manifest telltale symptoms like thirst or
weakness—hypercholesterolemia requires the services of a physician to
detect its presence. Many people who feel perfectly healthy suffer
from high cholesterol—in fact, feeling good is actually a symptom of
high cholesterol!
Doctors who treat this new disease must first convince their
patients that they are sick and need to take one or more expensive
drugs for the rest of their lives, drugs that require regular checkups
and blood tests. But such doctors do not work in a vacuum—their
efforts to convert healthy people into patients are bolstered by the
full weight of the US government, the media and the medical
establishment, agencies that have worked in concert to disseminate the
cholesterol dogma and convince the population that high cholesterol is
the forerunner of heart disease and possibly other diseases as well.
Who suffers from hypercholesterolemia? Peruse the medical
literature of 25 or 30 years ago and you’ll get the following answer:
any middle-aged man whose cholesterol is over 240 with other risk
factors, such as smoking or overweight. After the Cholesterol
Consensus Conference in 1984, the parameters changed; anyone (male or
female) with cholesterol over 200 could receive the dreaded diagnosis
and a prescription for pills. Recently that number has been moved down
to 180. If you have had a heart attack, you get to take
cholesterol-lowering medicines even if your cholesterol is already
very low—after all, you have committed the sin of having a heart
attack so your cholesterol must therefore be too high. The penance is
a lifetime of cholesterol-lowering medications along with a boring
lowfat diet. But why wait until you have a heart attack? Since we all
labor under the stigma of original sin, we are all candidates for
treatment. Current edicts stipulate cholesterol testing and treatment
for young adults and even children.
The drugs that doctors use to treat the new disease are called
statins—sold under a variety of names including Lipitor (atorvastatin),
Zocor (simvastatin), Mevacor (lovastatin) and Pravachol (pravastatin).
How Statins Work
The diagram below illustrates the pathways involved in cholesterol
production. The process begins with acetyl-CoA, a two-carbon molecule
sometimes referred to as the “building block of life.” Three acetyl-CoA
molecules combine to form six-carbon hydroxymethyl glutaric acid (HMG).
The step from HMG to mevalonate requires an enzyme, HMG-CoA reductase.
Statin drugs work by inhibiting this enzyme—hence the formal name of
HMG-CoA reductase inhibitors. Herein lies the potential for numerous
side effects, because statin drugs inhibit not just the production of
cholesterol, but a whole family of intermediary substances, many if
not all of which have important biochemical functions in their own
right.
Consider the findings of pediatricians at the University of
California, San Diego who published a description of a child with an
hereditary defect of mevalonic kinase, the enzyme that facilitates the
next step beyond HMG-CoA reductase.1 The child was mentally
retarded, microcephalic (very small head), small for his age,
profoundly anemic, acidotic and febrile. He also had cataracts.
Predictably, his cholesterol was consistently low—70-79 mg/dl. He died
at the age of 24 months. The child represents an extreme example of
cholesterol inhibition, but his case illuminates the possible
consequences of taking statins in strong doses or for a lengthy period
of time—depression of mental acuity, anemia, acidosis, frequent fevers
and cataracts.
Cholesterol is one of three end products in the mevalonate chain.
The two others are ubiquinone and dilochol. Ubiquinone or Co-Enzyme
Q10 is a critical cellular nutrient biosynthesized in the
mitochondria. It plays a role in ATP production in the cells and
functions as an electron carrier to cytochrome oxidase, our main
respiratory enzyme. The heart requires high levels of Co-Q10. A form
of Co-Q10 called ubiquinone is found in all cell membranes where it
plays a role in maintaining membrane integrity so critical to nerve
conduction and muscle integrity. Co-Q10 is also vital to the formation
of elastin and collagen. Side effects of Co-Q10 deficiency include
muscle wasting leading to weakness and severe back pain, heart failure
(the heart is a muscle!), neuropathy and inflammation of the tendons
and ligaments, often leading to rupture.
Dolichols also play a role of immense importance. In the cells they
direct various proteins manufactured in response to DNA directives to
their proper targets, ensuring that the cells respond correctly to
genetically programmed instruction. Thus statin drugs can lead to
unpredictable chaos on the cellular level, much like a computer virus
that wipes out certain pathways or files.
Squalene, the immediate precursor to cholesterol, has anti-cancer
effects, according to research.
The fact that some studies have shown that statins can prevent
heart disease, at least in the short term, is most likely explained
not by the inhibition of cholesterol production but because they block
the creation of mevalonate. Reduced amounts of mevalonate seem to make
smooth muscle cells less active, and platelets less able to produce
thromboxane. Atherosclerosis begins with the growth of smooth muscle
cells in side artery walls and thromboxane is necessary for blood
clotting.
Cholesterol
Of course, statins inhibit the production of cholesterol—they do
this very well. Nowhere is the failing of our medical system more
evident than in the wholesale acceptance of cholesterol reduction as a
way to prevent disease—have all these doctors forgotten what they
learned in biochemistry 101 about the many roles of cholesterol in the
human biochemistry? Every cell membrane in our body contains
cholesterol because cholesterol is what makes our cells
waterproof—without cholesterol we could not have a different
biochemistry on the inside and the outside of the cell. When
cholesterol levels are not adequate, the cell membrane becomes leaky
or porous, a situation the body interprets as an emergency, releasing
a flood of corticoid hormones that work by sequestering cholesterol
from one part of the body and transporting it to areas where it is
lacking. Cholesterol is the body’s repair substance: scar tissue
contains high levels of cholesterol, including scar tissue in the
arteries.
Cholesterol is the precursor to vitamin D, necessary for numerous
biochemical processes including mineral metabolism. The bile salts,
required for the digestion of fat, are made of cholesterol. Those who
suffer from low cholesterol often have trouble digesting fats.
Cholesterol also functions as a powerful antioxidant, thus protecting
us against cancer and aging.
Cholesterol is vital to proper neurological function. It plays a
key role in the formation of memory and the uptake of hormones in the
brain, including serotonin, the body’s feel-good chemical. When
cholesterol levels drop too low, the serotonin receptors cannot work.
Cholesterol is the main organic molecule in the brain, constituting
over half the dry weight of the cerebral cortex.
Finally, cholesterol is the precursor to all the hormones produced
in the adrenal cortex including glucocorticoids, which regulate blood
sugar levels, and mineralocorticoids, which regulate mineral balance.
Corticoids are the cholesterol-based adrenal hormones that the body
uses in response to stress of various types; it promotes healing and
balances the tendency to inflammation. The adrenal cortex also
produces sex hormones, including testosterone, estrogen and
progesterone, out of cholesterol. Thus, low cholesterol—whether due to
an innate error of metabolism or induced by cholesterol-lowering diets
and drugs—can be expected to disrupt the production of adrenal
hormones and lead to blood sugar problems, edema, mineral
deficiencies, chronic inflammation, difficulty in healing, allergies,
asthma, reduced libido, infertility and various reproductive problems.
Enter the Statins
Statin drugs entered the market with great promise. They replaced a
class of pharmaceuticals that lowered cholesterol by preventing its
absorption from the gut. These drugs often had immediate and
unpleasant side effects, including nausea, indigestion and
constipation, and in the typical patient they lowered cholesterol
levels only slightly. Patient compliance was low: the benefit did not
seem worth the side effects and the potential for use very limited. By
contrast, statin drugs had no immediate side effects: they did not
cause nausea or indigestion and they were consistently effective,
often lowering cholesterol levels by 50 points or more. During the
last 20 years, the industry has mounted an incredible promotional
campaign—enlisting scientists, advertising agencies, the media and the
medical profession in a blitz that turned the statins into one of the
bestselling pharmaceuticals of all time. Sixteen million Americans now
take Lipitor, the most popular statin, and drug company officials
claim that 36 million Americans are candidates for statin drug
therapy. What bedevils the industry is growing reports of side effects
that manifest many months after the commencement of therapy; the
November 2003 issue of Smart
Money magazine reports on a 1999 study at St. Thomas’
Hospital in London (apparently unpublished), which found that 36
percent of patients on Lipitor’s highest dose reported side effects;
even at the lowest dose, 10 percent reported side effects.2
Muscle Pain and Weakness
The most common side effect is muscle pain and weakness, a
condition called rhabdomyolysis, most likely due to the depletion of
Co-Q10, a nutrient that supports muscle function. Dr.
Beatrice Golomb of San Diego, California is currently conducting a
series of studies on statin side effects. The industry insists that
only 2-3 percent of patients get muscle aches and cramps but in one
study, Golomb found that 98 percent of patients taking Lipitor and
one-third of the patients taking Mevachor (a lower-dose statin)
suffered from muscle problems.3 A message board devoted to
Lipitor at
forum.ditonline.com contains more than 800 posts, many detailing
severe side effects. The Lipitor board at
www.rxlist.com contains more than 2,600 posts.
The test for muscle wasting or rhabdomyolysis is elevated levels of
a chemical called creatine kinase (CK). But many people experience
pain and fatigue even though they have normal CK levels.4
Tahoe City resident Doug Peterson developed slurred speech, balance
problems and severe fatigue after three years on Lipitor—for two and a
half years, he had no side effects at all.5 It began with
restless sleep patterns—twitching and flailing his arms. Loss of
balance followed and the beginning of what Doug calls the “statin
shuffle”—a slow, wobbly walk across the room. Fine motor skills
suffered next. It took him five minutes to write four words, much of
which was illegible. Cognitive function also declined. It was hard to
convince his doctors that Lipitor could be the culprit, but when he
finally stopped taking it, his coordination and memory improved.
John Altrocchi took Mevacor for three years without side effects;
then he developed calf pain so severe he could hardly walk. He also
experienced episodes of temporary memory loss.
For some, however, muscle problems show up shortly after treatment
begins. Ed Ontiveros began having muscle problems within 30 days of
taking Lipitor. He fell in the bathroom and had trouble getting up.
The weakness subsided when he went off Lipitor. In another case,
reported in the medical journal
Heart, a patient
developed rhabdomyolysis after a single dose of a statin.6
Heel pain from plantar fascitis (heel spurs) is another common
complaint among those taking statin drugs. One correspondent reported
the onset of pain in the feet shortly after beginning statin
treatment. She had visited an evangelist, requesting that he pray for
her sore feet. He enquired whether she was taking Lipitor. When she
said yes, he told her that his feet had also hurt when he took
Lipitor.7
Active people are much more likely to develop problems from statin
use than those who are sedentary. In a study carried out in Austria,
only six out of 22 athletes with familial hypercholesterolemia were
able to endure statin treatment.8 The others discontinued
treatment because of muscle pain.
By the way, other cholesterol-lowering agents besides statin drugs
can cause joint pain and muscle weakness. A report in Southern Medical
Journal described muscle pains and weakness in a man who took Chinese
red rice, an herbal preparation that lowers cholesterol.9
Anyone suffering from myopathy, fibromyalgia, coordination problems
and fatigue needs to look at low cholesterol plus Co-Q10
deficiency as a possible cause.
Neuropathy
Polyneuropathy, also known as peripheral neuropathy, is
characterized by weakness, tingling and pain in the hands and feet as
well as difficulty walking. Researchers who studied 500,000 residents
of Denmark, about 9 percent of that country’s population, found that
people who took statins were more likely to develop polyneuropathy.10
Taking statins for one year raised the risk of nerve damage by about
15 percent—about one case for every 2,200 patients. For those who took
statins for two or more years, the additional risk rose to 26 percent.
According to the research of Dr. Golomb, nerve problems are a
common side effect from statin use; patients who use statins for two
or more years are at a four to 14-fold increased risk of developing
idiopathic polyneuropathy compared to controls.11 She
reports that in many cases, patients told her they had complained to
their doctors about neurological problems, only to be assured that
their symptoms could not be related to cholesterol-lowering
medications.
The damage is often irreversible. People who take large doses for a
long time may be left with permanent nerve damage, even after they
stop taking the drug.
The question is, does widespread statin-induced neuropathy make our
elderly drivers (and even not-so-elderly drivers) more accident prone?
In July of 2003, an 86-year-old driver with an excellent driving
record plowed into a farmers’ market in Santa Monica, California,
killing 10 people. Several days later, a most interesting letter from
a Lake Oswego, Oregon woman appeared in the Washington Post:12
“My husband, at age 68, backed into the garage and stepped on the
gas, wrecking a lot of stuff. He said his foot slipped off the brake.
He had health problems and is on medication, including a cholesterol
drug, which is now known to cause problems with feeling in one’s legs.
“In my little community, older drivers have missed a turn and taken
out the end of a music store, the double doors of the post office and
the front of a bakery. In Portland, a bank had to do without its
drive-up window for some time.
“It is easy to say that one’s foot slipped, but the problem could
be lack of sensation. My husband’s sister-in-law thought her car was
malfunctioning when it refused to go when a light turned green, until
she looked down and saw that her food was on the brake. I have another
friend who mentioned having no feeling in her lower extremities. She
thought about having her car retrofitted with hand controls but opted
for the handicapped bus instead.”
Heart Failure
We are currently in the midst of a congestive heart failure
epidemic in the United States—while the incidence of heart attack has
declined slightly, an increase in the number heart failure cases has
outpaced these gains. Deaths attributed to heart failure more than
doubled from 1989 to 1997.13 (Statins were first given
pre-market approval in 1987.) Interference with production of Co-Q10
by statin drugs is the most likely explanation. The heart is a muscle
and it cannot work when deprived of Co-Q10.
Cardiologist Peter Langsjoen studied 20 patients with completely
normal heart function. After six months on a low dose of 20 mg of
Lipitor a day, two-thirds of the patients had abnormalities in the
heart’s filling phase, when the muscle fills with blood. According to
Langsjoen, this malfunction is due to Co-Q10 depletion.
Without Co-Q10, the cell’s mitochondria are inhibited from
producing energy, leading to muscle pain and weakness. The heart is
especially susceptible because it uses so much energy.14
Co-Q10 depletion becomes more and more of a problem as
the pharmaceutical industry encourages doctors to lower cholesterol
levels in their patients by greater and greater amounts. Fifteen
animal studies in six different animal species have documented statin-induced
Co-Q10 depletion leading to decreased ATP production,
increased injury from heart failure, skeletal muscle injury and
increased mortality. Of the nine controlled trials on statin-induced
Co-Q10 depletion in humans, eight showed significant Co-Q10
depletion leading to decline in left ventricular function and
biochemical imbalances.15
Yet virtually all patients with heart failure are put on statin
drugs, even if their cholesterol is already low. Of interest is a
recent study indicating that patients with chronic heart failure
benefit from having high levels of cholesterol rather than low.
Researchers in Hull, UK followed 114 heart failure patients for at
least 12 months.16 Survival was 78 percent at 12 months and
56 percent at 36 months. They found that for every point of
decrease in serum
cholesterol, there was a 36 percent
increase in the risk of
death within 3 years.
Dizziness
Dizziness is commonly associated with statin use, possibly due to
pressure-lowering effects. One woman reported dizziness one half hour
after taking Pravachol.17 When she stopped taking it, the
dizziness cleared up. Blood pressure lowering has been reported with
several statins in published studies. According to Dr. Golumb, who
notes that dizziness is a common adverse effect, the elderly may be
particularly sensitive to drops in blood pressure.18
Cognitive Impairment
The November 2003 issue of
Smart Money19 describes the case of Mike Hope,
owner of a successful ophthalmologic supply company: “There’s an
awkward silence when you ask Mike Hope his age. He doesn’t change the
subject or stammer, or make a silly joke about how he stopped counting
at 21. He simply doesn’t remember. Ten seconds pass. Then 20. Finally
an answer comes to him. ‘I’m 56,’ he says. Close, but not quite. ‘I
will be 56 this year.’ Later, if you happen to ask him about the book
he’s reading, you’ll hit another roadblock. He can’t recall the title,
the author or the plot.” Statin use since 1998 has caused his speech
and memory to fade. He was forced to close his business and went on
Social Security 10 years early. Things improved when he discontinued
Lipitor in 2002, but he is far from complete recovery—he still cannot
sustain a conversation. What Lipitor did was turn Mike Hope into an
old man when he was in the prime of life.
Cases like Mike’s have shown up in the medical literature as well.
An article in Pharmacotherapy,
December 2003, for example, reports two cases of cognitive impairment
associated with Lipitor and Zocor.20 Both patients suffered
progressive cognitive decline that reversed completely within a month
after discontinuation of the statins. A study conducted at the
University of Pittsburgh showed that patients treated with statins for
six months compared poorly with patients on a placebo in solving
complex mazes, psychomotor skills and memory tests.21
Dr. Golomb has found that 15 percent of statin patients develop
some cognitive side effects.22 The most harrowing involve
global transient amnesia—complete memory loss for a brief or lengthy
period—described by former astronaut Duane Graveline in his book
Lipitor: Thief of Memory.23
Sufferers report baffling incidents involving complete loss of
memory—arriving at a store and not remembering why they are there,
unable to remember their name or the names of their loved ones, unable
to find their way home in the car. These episodes occur suddenly and
disappear just as suddenly. Graveline points out that we are all at
risk when the general public is taking statins—do you want to be in an
airplane when your pilot develops statin-induced amnesia?
While the pharmaceutical industry denies that statins can cause
amnesia, memory loss has shown up in several statin trials. In a trial
involving 2502 subjects, amnesia occurred in 7 receiving Lipitor;
amnesia also occurred in 2 of 742 subjects during comparative trials
with other statins. In addition, “abnormal thinking” was reported in 4
of the 2502 clinical trial subjects.24 The total recorded
side effects was therefore 0.5 percent; a figure that likely
under-represents the true frequency since memory loss was not
specifically studied in these trials.
Cancer
In every study with rodents to date, statins have caused cancer.25
Why have we not seen such a dramatic correlation in human studies?
Because cancer takes a long time to develop and most of the statin
trials do not go on longer than two or three years. Still, in one
trial, the CARE trial, breast cancer rates of those taking a statin
went up 1500 percent.26 In the Heart Protection Study,
non-melanoma skin cancer occurred in 243 patients treated with
simvastatin compared with 202 cases in the control group.27
Manufacturers of statin drugs have recognized the fact that statins
depress the immune system, an effect that can lead to cancer and
infectious disease, recommending statin use for inflammatory arthritis
and as an immune suppressor for transplant patients.28
Pancreatic Rot
The medical literature contains several reports of pancreatitis in
patients taking statins. One paper describes the case of a 49-year-old
woman who was admitted to the hospital with diarrhea and septic shock
one month after beginning treatment with lovastatin.29 She died after
prolonged hospitalization; the cause of death was necrotizing
pancreatitis. Her doctors noted that the patient had no evidence of
common risk factors for acute pancreatitis, such as biliary tract
disease or alcohol use. “Prescribers of statins (particularly
simvastatin and lovastatin) should take into account the possibility
of acute pancreatitis in patients who develop abdominal pain within
the first weeks of treatment with these drugs,” they warned.
Depression
Numerous studies have linked low cholesterol with depression. One
of the most recent found that women with low cholesterol are twice as
likely to suffer from depression and anxiety. Researchers from Duke
University Medical Center carried out personality trait measurements
on 121 young women aged 18 to 27.30 They found that 39
percent of the women with low cholesterol levels scored high on
personality traits that signalled proneness to depression, compared to
19 percent of women with normal or high levels of cholesterol. In
addition, one in three of the women with low cholesterol levels scored
high on anxiety indicators, compared to 21 percent with normal levels.
Yet the author of the study, Dr. Edward Suarez, cautioned women with
low cholesterol against eating “foods such as cream cakes” to raise
cholesterol, warning that these types of food “can cause heart
disease.” In previous studies on men, Dr. Suarez found that men who
lower their cholesterol levels with medication have increased rates of
suicide and violent death, leading the researchers to theorize “that
low cholesterol levels were causing mood disturbances.”
How many elderly statin-takers eke through their golden years
feeling miserable and depressed, when they should be enjoying their
grandchildren and looking back with pride on their accomplishments?
But that is the new dogma—you may have a long life as long as it is
experienced as a vale of tears.
Any Benefits?
Most doctors are convinced—and seek to convince their patients—that
the benefits of statin drugs far outweigh the side effects. They can
cite a number of studies in which statin use has lowered the number of
coronary deaths compared to controls. But as Dr. Ravnskov has pointed
out in his book The Cholesterol
Myths,31 the results of the major studies up to
the year 2000—the 4S, WOSCOPS, CARE, AFCAPS and LIPID
studies—generally showed only small differences and these differences
were often statistically insignificant and independent of the amount
of cholesterol lowering achieved. In two studies, EXCEL, and FACAPT/TexCAPS,
more deaths occurred in the treatment group compared to controls. Dr.
Ravnskov’s 1992 meta-analysis of 26 controlled cholesterol-lowering
trials found an equal number of cardiovascular deaths in the treatment
and control groups and a greater number of total deaths in the
treatment groups.32 An analysis of all the big controlled
trials reported before 2000 found that long-term use of statins for
primary prevention of heart disase produced a 1 percent greater risk
of death over 10 years compared to a placebo.33
Recently published studies do not provide any more justification
for the current campaign to put as many people as possible on statin
drugs.
Honolulu Hearth Program (2001)
This report, part of an ongoing study, looked at cholesterol
lowering in the elderly. Researchers compared changes in cholesterol
concentrations over 20 years with all-cause mortality.34 To
quote: “Our data accords with previous findings of increased mortality
in elderly people with low serum cholesterol, and show that long-term
persistence of low cholesterol concentration actually increases risk
of death. Thus, the earlier that patients start to have lower
cholesterol concentrations, the greater the risk of death. . . The
most striking findings were related to changes in cholesterol between
examination three (1971-74) and examination four (1991-93). There are
few studies that have cholesterol concentrations from the same
patients at both middle age and old age. Although our results lend
support to previous findings that low serum cholesterol imparts a poor
outlook when compared with higher concentrations of cholesterol in
elderly people, our data also suggest that
those individuals with a low serum
cholesterol maintained over a 20-year period will have the worst
outlook for all-cause mortality [emphasis ours].”
MIRACL (2001)
The MIRACL study looked at the effects of a high dose of Lipitor on
3086 patients in the hospital after angina or nonfatal MI and followed
them for 16 weeks.35 According to the abstract: “For
patients with acute coronary syndrome, lipid-lowering therapy with
atorvastatin, 80 mg/day, reduced recurrent ischemic events in the
first 16 weeks, mostly recurrent symptomatic ischemia requiring
rehospitalization.” What the abstract did not mention was that there
was no change in death rate compared to controls and no significant
change in re-infarction rate or need for resuscitation from cardiac
arrest. The only change was a significant drop in chest pain requiring
rehospitalization.
ALLHAT (2002)
ALLHAT (Antihypertensive and Lipid-Lowering Treatment to Prevent
Heart Attack Trial), the largest North American cholesterol-lowering
trial ever and the largest trial in the world using Lipitor, showed
mortality of the treatment group and controls after 3 or 6 years was
identical.36 Researchers used data from more than 10,000
participants and followed them over a period of four years, comparing
the use of a statin drug to “usual care,” namely maintaining proper
body weight, no smoking, regular exercise, etc., in treating subjects
with moderately high levels of LDL cholesterol. Of the 5170 subjects
in the group that received statin drugs, 28 percent lowered their LDL
cholesterol significantly. And of the 5185 usual-care subjects, about
11 percent had a similar drop in LDL.
But both groups showed the same
rates of death, heart attack and heart disease.
Heart Protection Study (2002)
Carried out at Oxford University,37 this study received
widespread press coverage; researchers claimed “massive benefits” from
cholesterol-lowering,38 leading one commentator to predict
that statin drugs were “the new aspirin.”39 But as Dr.
Ravnskov points out,40 the benefits were far from massive.
Those who took simvastatin had an 87.1 percent survival rate after
five years compared to an 85.4 percent survival rate for the controls
and these results were independent of the amount of cholesterol
lowering. The authors of the Heart Protection Study never published
cumulative mortality data, even though they received many requests to
do so and even though they received funding and carried out a study to
look at cumulative data. According to the authors, providing
year-by-year mortality data would be an “inappropriate” way of
publishing their study results.41
PROSPER (2002)
PROSPER (Prospective Study of Pravastatin in the Elderly at Risk)
studied the effect of pravastatin compared to placebo in two older
populations of patients of which 56 percent were primary prevention
cases (no past or symptomatic cardiovascular disease) and 44 percent
were secondary prevention cases (past or symptomatic cardiovascular
disease).42 Pravastatin did not reduce total myocardial
infarction or total stroke in the primary prevention population but
did so in the secondary. However, measures of overall health impact in
the combined populations, total mortality and total serious adverse
events were unchanged by pravastatin as compared to the placebo and
those in the treatment group had increased cancer. In other words: not
one life saved.
J-LIT (2002)
Japanese Lipid Intervention Trial was a 6-year study of 47,294
patients treated with the same dose of simvastatin.43
Patients were grouped by the amount of cholesterol lowering. Some
patient had no reduction in LDL levels, some had a moderate fall in
LDL and some had very large LDL reductions. The results: no
correlation between the amount of LDL lowering and death rate at five
years. Those with LDL cholesterol lower than 80 had a death rate of
just over 3.5 at five years; those whose LDL was over 200 had a death
rate of just over 3.5 at five years.
Meta-Analysis (2003)
In a meta-analysis of 44 trials involving almost 10,000 patients,
the death rate was identical at 1 percent of patients in each of the
three groups—those taking atorvastatin (Lipitor), those taking other
statins and those taking nothing.44 Furthermore, 65 percent
of those on treatment versus 45 percent of the controls experienced an
adverse event. Researchers claimed that the incidence of adverse
effects was the same in all three groups, but 3 percent of the
atorvastatin-treated patients and 4 percent of those receiving other
statins withdrew due to treatment-associated adverse events, compared
with 1 percent of patients on the placebo.
Statins and Plaque (2003)
A study published in the
American Journal of Cardiology casts serious doubts on the
commonly held belief that lowering your LDL-cholesterol, the so-called
bad cholesterol, is the most effective way to reduced arterial plaque.45
Researchers at Beth Israel Medical Center in New York City examined
the coronary plaque buildup in 182 subjects who took statin drugs to
lower cholesterol levels. One group of subjects used the drug
aggressively (more than 80 mg per day) while the balance of the
subjects took less than 80 mg per day. Using electron beam tomography,
the researchers measured plaque in all of the subjects before and
after a study period of more than one year. The subjects were
generally successful in lowering their cholesterol, but in the end
there was no statistical difference in the two groups in the
progression of arterial calcified plaque. On average, subjects in
both groups showed a
9.2 percent increase in plaque
buildup.
Statins and Women (2003)
No study has shown a significant reduction in mortality in women
treated with statins. The University of British Columbia Therapeutics
Initiative came to the same conclusion, with the finding that statins
offer no benefit to women for prevention of heart disease.46
Yet in February of 2004,
Circulation published an article in which more than 20
organizations endorsed cardiovascular disease prevention guidelines
for women with several mentions of “preferably a statin.”47
ASCOT-LLA (2003)
ASCOT-LLA (Anglo-Scandinavian Cardiac Outcomes Trial—Lipid Lowering
Arm) was designed to assess the benefits of atorvastatin (Lipitor)
versus a placebo in patients who had high blood pressure with average
or lower-than-average cholesterol concentrations and at least three
other cardiovascular risk factors.48 The trial was
originally planned for five years but was stopped after a median
follow-up of 3.3 years because of a significant reduction in cardiac
events. Lipitor did reduce total myocardial infarction and total
stroke; however, total
mortality was not significantly reduced. In fact, women
were worse off with treatment. The trial report stated that total
serious adverse events “did not differ between patients assigned
atorvastatin or placebo,” but did not supply the actual numbers of
serious events.
Cholesterol Levels in
Dialysis Patients (2004)
In a study of dialysis patients, those with
higher cholesterol
levels had lower
mortality than those with low cholesterol.49 Yet the
authors claimed that the “inverse association of total cholesterol
level with mortality in dialysis patients is likely due to the
cholesterol-lowering effect of systemic inflammation and malnutrition,
not to a protective effect of high cholesterol concentrations.”
Keeping an eye on further funding opportunities, the authors
concluded: “These findings support treatment of hypercholesterolemia
in this population.”
PROVE-IT (2004)
PROVE-IT (PRavastatin Or AtorVastatin Evaluation and Infection
Study),50 led by researchers at Harvard University Medical
School, attracted immense media attention. “Study of Two Cholesterol
Drugs Finds One Halts Heart Disease,” was the headline in the
New York Times.51
In an editorial entitled “Extra-Low Cholesterol,” the paper predicted
that “The findings could certainly presage a significant change in the
way heart disease patients are treated. It should also start a careful
evaluation of whether normally healthy people could benefit from a
sharp drug-induced reduction in their cholesterol levels.”52
The Washington Post
was even more effusive, with a headline “Striking Benefits Found in
Ultra-Low Cholesterol.”53 “Heart patients who achieved
ultra-low cholesterol levels in one study were 16 percent less likely
to get sicker or to die than those who hit what are usually considered
optimal levels. The findings should prompt doctors to give much higher
doses of drugs known as statins to hundreds of thousands of patients
who already have severe heart problems, experts said. In addition, it
will probably encourage physicians to start giving the medications to
millions of healthy people who are not yet on them, and to boost
dosages for some of those already taking them to lower their
cholesterol even more, they said.”
The study compared two statin drugs, Lipitor and Pravachol.
Although Bristol Myers-Squibb (BMS), makers of Pravachol, sponsored
the study, Lipitor (made by Pfizer) outperformed its rival Pravachol
in lowering LDL. The “striking benefit” was a 22 percent rate of death
or further adverse coronary events in the Lipitor patients compared to
26 percent in the Pravachol patients.
PROVE-IT investigators took 4162 patient who had been in the
hospital following an MI or unstable angina. Half got Pravachol and
half got Lipitor. Those taking Lipitor had the greatest reduction of
LDL-cholesterol—LDL in the Pravachol group was 95, in the Lipitor
group it was 62—a 32 percent greater reduction in LDL levels and a 16
percent reduction in all-cause mortality. But that 16 percent was a
reduction in relative risk. As pointed out by Red Flags Daily
columnist Dr. Malcolm Kendrick, the absolute reduction in the rate of
the death rate of those taking Lipitor rather than Pravachol, was one
percent, a decrease from 3.2 percent to 2.2 percent over 2 years.54
Or, to put it another way, a 0.5 percent absolute risk reduction per
year—these were the figures that launched the massive campaign for
cholesterol-lowering in people with no risk factors for heart disease,
not even high cholesterol.
And the study was seriously flawed with what Kendrick calls “the
two-variables conundrum.” “It is true that those with the greatest LDL
lowering were protected against death. However, . . . those who were
protected not only had a greater degree of LDL lowering,
they were also on a different drug!
which is rather important, yet seems to have been swept aside on a
wave of hype. If you really want to prove that the more you lower the
LDL level, the greater the protection, then you
must use the same drug.
This achieves the absolutely critical requirement of any scientific
experiment, which is to remove all possible uncontrolled variables. .
. As this study presently stands, because they used different drugs,
anyone can make the case that the benefits seen in the patients on
atorvastatin [Lipitor] had nothing to do with greater LDL lowering;
they were purely due to the direct drug effects of atorvastatin.”
Kendrick notes that the carefully constructed J-LIT study, published 2
years earlier, found no correlation whatsoever between the amount of
LDL lowering and death rate. This study had ten times as many
patients, lasted almost three times as long and used the same drug at
the same dose in all patients. Not surprisingly, J-LIT attracted
virtually no media attention.
PROVE-IT did not look at side effects but Dr. Andrew G. Bodnar,
senior vice president for strategy and medical and external affairs at
Bristol Meyer Squibb, makers of the losing statin, indicated that
liver enzymes were elevated in 3.3 percent of the Lipitor group but
only in 1.1 percent of the Pravachol group, noting that when liver
enzyme levels rise, patients must be advised to stop taking the drug
or reduce the dose.55 And withdrawal rates were very high:
thirty-three percent of patients discontinued Pravachol and 30 percent
discontinued Lipitor after two years due to adverse events or other
reasons.56
REVERSAL (2004)
In a similar study, carried out at the Cleveland Clinic, patients
were given either Lipitor or Pravachol. Those receiving Lipitor
achieved much lower LDL-cholesterol levels and a reversal in “the
progression of coronary plaque aggregation.”57 Those who
took Lipitor had plaque reduced by 0.4 percent over 18 months, based
on intravascular ultrasound (not the more accurate tool of electron
beam tomography); Dr. Eric Topol of the Cleveland Clinic claimed these
decidedly unspectacular results “Herald a shake-up in the field of
cardiovascular prevention.. . . the implications of this turning
point—that is, of the new era of intensive statin therapy—are
profound. Even today, only a fraction of the patients who should be
treated with a statin are actually receiving such therapy. . . More
than 200 million people worldwide meet the criteria for treatment, but
fewer than 25 million take statins.”58 Not surprisingly, an
article in The Wall Street
Journal noted “Lipitor Prescriptions Surge in Wake of Big
Study.”59
But as Dr. Ravnskov points out, the investigators looked at change
in atheroma volume, not the change in lumen area, “a more important
parameter because it determines the amount of blood that can be
delivered to the myocardium. Change of atheroma volume cannot be
translated to clinical events because adaptive mechansims try to
maintain a normal lumen area during early atherogenesis.”60
Other Uses
With such paltry evidence of benefit, statin drugs hardly merit the
hyperbole heaped upon them. Yet the industry maintains a full court
press, urging their use for greater and greater numbers of people, not
only for cholesterol lowering but also as treatment for other
diseases—cancer, multiple sclerosis, osteoporosis, stroke, macular
degeneration, arthritis and even mental disorders such as memory and
learning problems, Alzheimers and dementia.61 New
guidelines published by the American College of Physicians call for
statin use by all people with diabetes older than 55 and for younger
diabetes patients who have any other risk factor for heart disease,
such as high blood pressure or a history of smoking.62
David A. Drachman, professor of neurology at the University of
Massachusetts Medical School calls statins “Viagra for the brain.”63
Other medical writers have heralded the polypill, composed of a statin
drug mixed with a blood pressure medication, aspirin and niacin, as a
prevent-all that everyone can take. The industry is also seeking the
right to sell statins over the counter.
Can honest assessment find any possible use for these dangerous
drugs? Dr. Peter Langsjoen of Tyler, Texas, suggests that statin drugs
are appropriate only as a treatment for cases of advanced Cholesterol
Neurosis, created by the industry’s anti-cholesterol propaganda. If
you are concerned about your cholesterol, a statin drug will relieve
you of your worries.
Creative Advertising
The best advertising for statin drugs is free front-page coverage
following gushy press releases. But not everyone reads the paper or
goes in for regular medical exams, so statin manufacturers pay big
money for creative ways to create new users. For example, a new health
awareness group called the Boomer Coalition supported ABC’s Academy
Awards telecast in March of 2004 with a 30-second spot flashing
nostalgic images of celebrities lost to cardiovascular disease—actor
James Coburn, baseball star Don Drysdale and comedian Redd Foxx. While
the Boomer Coalition sounds like a grass roots group of health
activists, it is actually a creation of Pfizer, manufacturers of
Lipitor. “We’re always looking for creative ways to break through what
we’ve found to be a lack of awareness and action,” says Michal
Fishman, a Pfizer spokeswoman. “We’re always looking for what people
really think and what’s going to make people take action,” adding that
there is a stigma about seeking treatment and many people “wrongly
assume that if they are physically fit, they aren’t at risk for heart
disease.”64 The Boomer Coalition website allows visitors to
“sign up and take responsibility for your heart health,” by providing
a user name, age, email address and blood pressure and cholesterol
level.
A television ad in Canada admonished viewers to “Ask your doctor
about the Heart Protection Study from Oxford University.” The ad did
not urge viewers to ask their doctors about EXCEL, ALLHAT, ASCOT,
MIRACL or PROSPER, studies that showed no benefit—and the potential
for great harm—from taking statin drugs.
The Costs
Statin drugs are very expensive—a course of statins for a year
costs between $900 and $1400. They constitute the mostly widely sold
pharmaceutical drug, accounting for 6.5 percent of market share and
12.5 billion dollars in revenue for the industry. Your insurance
company may pay most of that cost, but consumers always ultimately pay
with higher insurance premiums. Payment for statin drugs poses a huge
burden for Medicare, so much so that funds may not be available for
truly lifesaving medical measures.
In the UK, according to the National Health Service, doctors wrote
31 million prescriptions for statins in 2003, up from 1 million in
1995 at a cost of 7 billion pounds—and that’s just in one tiny island.65
In the US, statins currently bring in $12.5 billion annually for the
pharmaceutical industry. Sales of Lipitor, the number-one-selling
statin, are projected to hit $10 billion in 2005.
Even if statin drugs do provide some benefit, the cost is very
high. In the WOSCOP clinical trial where healthy people with high
cholesterol were treated with statins, the five-year death rate for
treated subjects was reduced by a mere 0.6 percent. As Dr. Ravnskov
points out,66 to achieve that slight reduction about 165 healthy
people had to be treated for five years to extend one life by five
years. The cost for that one life comes to $1.2 million dollars. In
the most optimistic calculations, the costs to save one year of life
in patients with CHD is estimated at $10,000, and much more for
healthy individuals. “This may not sound unreasonable,” says Dr.
Ravnskov. “Isn’t a human life worth $10,000 or more?”
“The implication of such reasoning is that to add as many years as
possible, more than half of mankind should take statin drugs every day
from an early age to the end of life. It is easy to calculate that the
costs for such treatment would consume most of any government’s health
budget. And if money is spent to give statin treatment to all healthy
people, what will remain for the care of those who really need it?
Shouldn’t health care be given primarily to the sick and the
crippled?”
REFERENCES
1. Hoffman G.
N Engl J Med
1986;314:1610-24
2. Eleanor Laise. The Lipitor Dilemma,
Smart Money: The Wall Street
Journal Magazine of Personal Business, November 2003.
3. Eleanor Laise. The Lipitor Dilemma,
Smart Money: The Wall Street
Journal Magazine of Personal Business, November 2003.
4. Beatrice A. Golomb, MD, PhD on Statin Drugs, March 7, 2002.
www.coloradohealthsite.org/topics/interviews/golomb.html
5. Melissa Siig. Life After Lipitor: Is Pfizer product a quick fix
or dangerous drug? Residents experience adverse reactions.
Tahoe World, January
29, 2004.
6. Jamil S, Iqbal P.
Heart
2004 Jan;90(1):e3.
7. Personal communication, Laura Cooper, May 1, 2003.
8. Sinzinger H, O’Grady J.
Br J Clin Pharmacol. 2004 Apr;57(4):525-8.
9. Smith DJ and Olive KE.
Southern Medical Journal 96(12):1265-1267, December 2003.
10. Gaist D and others.
Neurology 2002 May 14;58(9):1321-2.
11. Statins and the Risk of Polyneuropathy.
http://coloradohealthsite.org/CHNReports/statins_polyneuropathy.html
12. The Struggles of Older Drivers, letter by Elizabeth Scherdt.
Washington Post,
June 21, 2003.
13. Langsjoen PH. The clinical use of HMG Co-A reductase inhibitors
(statins) and the associated depletion of the essential co-factor
coenzyme Q10: a review of pertinent human and animal data.
http://www.fda.gov/ohrms/dockets/dailys/02/May02/052902/02p-0244-cp00001-02-Exhibit_A-vol1.pdf
14. Eleanor Laise. The Lipitor Dilemma,
Smart Money: The Wall Street
Journal Magazine of Personal Business, November 2003.
15. Langsjoen PH. The clinical use of HMG Co-A reductase inhibitors
(statins) and the associated depletion of the essential co-factor
coenzyme Q10: a review of pertinent human and animal data.
http://www.fda.gov/ohrms/dockets/dailys/02/May02/052902/02p-0244-cp00001-02-Exhibit_A-vol1.pdf
16. Clark AL and others.
J
Am Coll Cardiol 2003;42:1933-1943.
17. Personal communication, Jason DuPont, MD, July 7, 2003
18. Sandra G Boodman. Statins’ Nerve Problems.
Washington Post,
September 3, 2002.
19. Eleanor Laise. The Lipitor Dilemma,
Smart Money: The Wall Street
Journal Magazine of Personal Business, November 2003,
20. King, DS.
Pharmacotherapy 25(12):1663-7, Dec, 2003.
21. Muldoon MF and others.
Am J Med 2000 May;108(7):538-46.
22. Email communication, Beatrice Golomb, July 10, 2003.
23. Duane Graveline, MD.
Lipitor: Thief of Memory, 2004,
www.buybooksontheweb.com.
24. Lopena OF. Pharm D, Pfizer, Inc., written communication, 2002.
Quoted in an email communication from Duane Graveline,
spacedoc@webtv.net
25. Newman TB, Hulley SB.
JAMA 1996;27:55-60
26. Sacks FM and others.
N
Eng J Med
1996;385;1001-1009.
27. Heart Protection Study Collaborative Group.
Lancet 2002;360:7-22.
28. Leung BP and others.
J
Immunol. Feb 2003 170(3);1524-30; Palinski W. Nature
Medicine Dec 2000 6;1311-1312.
29.
J Pharm Technol
2003;19:283-286.
30. Low Cholesterol Linked to Depression. BBC Online Network, May
25,1999.
31. Uffe Ravnskov, MD, PhD.
The Cholesterol Myths. NewTrends Publishing, 2000.
32. Ravnskov U.
BMJ. 1992;305:15-19.
33. Jackson PR.
Br J Clin Pharmacol
2001;52:439-46.
34. Schatz IJ and others.
Lancet 2001 Aug 4;358:351-355.
35. Schwartz GG and others.
J Am Med Assoc. 2001;285:1711-8.
36. The ALLHAT Officers and Coordinators for the ALLHAT
Collaborative Research Group. JAMA 2002;288:2998-3007.
37. Heart Protection Study Collaborative Group.
Lancet 2002;360:7-22.
38. Medical Research Council/British Heart Foundation Heart
Protection Study.Press release. Life-saver: World’s largest
cholesterol-lowering trial reveals massive benefits for high-risk
patients. Available at
www.ctsu.ox.ac.uk/~hps/pr.shtml.
39. Kmietowicz A.
BMJ
2001;323:1145
40. Ravnskov U.
BMJ
2002;324:789
41. Email communication, Eddie Vos, February 13, 2004 and posted at
www.health-heart.org/comments.htm#PetoCollins.
42. Shepherd J and others.
Lancet 2002;360:1623-1630.
43. Matsuzaki M and others.
Circ J. 2002 Dec;66(12):1087-95.
44. Hecht HS, Harmon SM.
Am
J Cardiol 2003; 92:670-676
45. Hecht HS and others.
Am
J Cardiol 2003;92:334-336
46. Jenkins AJ.
BMJ
2003 Oct 18;327(7420):933.
47.
Circulation,
2004 Feb 17;109(6):714-21.
48. Sever PS and others.
Lancet 2003;361:1149-1158.
49. Liu Y and others.
JAMA
2004;291:451-459.
50. Cannon CP and others.
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Engl J Med 2004
Apr 8;350(15):1495-504. Epub 2004 Mar 08.
51. Gina Kolata. Study of Two Cholesterol Drugs Finds One Halts
Heart Disease. The New York
Times, November 13, 2003.
52. Extra-Low Cholesterol,
The New York Times, March 10, 2003
53. Rob Stein. Striking Benefits Found in Ultra-Low Cholesterol,
The Washington Post,
March 9, 2004
54. Dr. Malcolm Kendrick. PROVE IT- PROVE WHAT?
http://www.redflagsweekly.com/applications/ui/login.php?Next=/kendrick/
2004_mar10.php&e=4
55. Health Sciences Institute e-alert,
www.hsibaltimore.com, March 11, 2004
56. Email communication, Joel Kauffman, April 15, 2004.
57. Nissen SE and others.
JAMA 2004 Mar 3;291(9):1071-80.
58. Dr. Malcolm Kendrick. PROVE IT- PROVE WHAT?
http://www.redflagsweekly.com/applications/ui/login.php?Next=/kendrick/
2004_mar10.php&e=4
59. Scott Hensley. The Statin Dilemma: How Sluggish Sales Hurt
Merck, Pfizer. The Wall Street
Journal, July 25, 2003.
60. Ravnskov, U. Unpublished letter.
ravnskov@tele2.se .
61. Cholesterol—And Beyond: Statin Drugs Have Cut Heart Disease.
Now They Show Promise Against Alzheimer’s, Multiple Sclerosis &
Osteoporosis. Newsweek,
July 14. 2003.
62. John O’Neil. Treatments: Statins and Diabetes: New Advice.
New York Times, April
20, 2004.
63. Peter Jaret. Statins’ Burst of Benefits.
Los Angeles Times, July
2. 2003.
64. Behind the ‘Boomer Coalition,’ A Heart Message from Pfizer,
Wall Street Journal,
March 10, 2004
65. Paul J. Fallon, personal communication, March, 2004.
66. Uffe Ravnskov, MD, PhD.
The Cholesterol Myths. NewTrends Publishing, 2000, pp
208-210.
Sidebar Articles
Cholesterol Synthesis

A Better Way
If statins work, they do so by reducing inflammation, not because
they lower cholesterol. Statins block the production of mevalonate
leading to inhibition of platelet clumping and reduction of
inflammation in the artery walls. However, simple changes in the diet
can achieve the same effect without also cutting off the body’s vital
supply of cholesterol:
-
Avoid trans fats, known to
contribute to inflammation
-
Avoid refined sugars, especially
fructose, known to stimulate clumping of the blood platelets
-
Take cod liver oil, an excellent
dietary source of anti-inflammatory vitamin A, vitamin D and EPA
-
Eat plenty of saturated fats,
which encourage the production of anti-inflammatory prostaglandins
-
Take evening primrose, borage or
black currant oil, sources of GLA which the body uses to make
anti-inflammatory prostaglandins
-
Eat foods high in copper,
especially liver; copper deficiency is associatied with clot
formation and inflammation in the arteries
-
Eat coconut oil and coconut
products; coconut oil protects against bacteria and viruses that can
lead to inflammation in the artery wall
-
Avoid reduced-fat milks and
powdered milk products (such as powdered whey); they contain
oxidized cholesterol, shown to cause irritation of the artery wall
Dietary Trials
Doctors and other health professionals claim there is ample proof
that animal fats cause heart disease while they confidently advise us
to adopt a lowfat diet; actually the literature contains only two
studies involving humans that compared the outcome (not markers like
cholesterol levels) of a diet high in animal fat with a diet based on
vegetable oils, and both showed that animal fats are protective.
The Anti-Coronary Club project, launched in 1957 and published in
1966 in the Journal of the American Medical Association, compared two
groups of New York businessmen, aged 40 to 59 years. One group
followed the so-called “Prudent Diet” consisting of corn oil and
margarine instead of butter, cold breakfast cereals instead of eggs
and chicken and fish instead of beef; a control group ate eggs for
breakfast and meat three times per day. The final report noted that
the Prudent Dieters had average serum cholesterol of 220 mg/l,
compared to 250 mg/l in the eggs-and-meat group. But there were eight
deaths from heart disease among Prudent Dieter group, and none among
those who ate meat three times a day
In a study published in the British Medical Journal, 1965, patients
who had already had a heart attack were divided into three groups: one
group got polyunsaturated corn oil, the second got monounsaturated
olive oil and the third group was told to eat animal fat. After two
years, the corn oil group had 30 percent lower cholesterol, but only
52 percent of them were still alive. The olive oil groups fared little
better—only 57 percent were alive after two years. But of the group
that ate mostly animal fat, 75 percent were still alive after two
years.
What About Aspirin?
The other drug recommended for prevention of heart attacks and
strokes is aspirin. Estimates suggest that 20 million persons are
taking aspirin daily for prevention of vascular accidents. Yet at
least four studies have shown no benefit. A study using Bufferin
(aspirin and magnesium) showed no reduction in fatal heart attacks and
no improvement in survival rate but a 40 percent decrease in the
number of nonfatal heart attacks. Commentators reported these results
as showing the benefit of aspirin, ignoring the fact that magnesium is
of proven benefit in heart disease. Aspirin inhibits the enzyme
Delta-6 Desaturase, needed for the production of Gamma-Linoleic Acid (GLA)
and important anti-inflammatory prostaglandins. This fact explains
many of aspirin’s side effects, including gastrointestinal bleeding
and increased risk of macular degeneration and cataract formation.
Other side effects include increased risk of pancreatic cancer, acid
reflux, asthma attacks, kidney damage, liver problems, ulcers, anemia,
hearing loss, allergic reactions, vomiting, diarrhea, dizziness and
even hallucinations (James Howenstine,
NewsWithViews.com, April 21, 2004).
Late-Breaking Cholesterol News
Researchers at the Tulane University School of Medicine used
electron beam tomography (EBT) to measure the progression of plaque
buildup in heart-attack patients taking statin drugs. EBT is a very
accurate way to measure occlusion from calcium in the arteries.
Contrary to expectations, the researchers discovered that the
progression of coronary artery calcium (CAC) was significantly greater
in patients receiving statins compared with event-free subjects
despite similar levels of LDL-lowering. Said the researchers:
“Continued expansion of CAC may indicate failure of some patients to
benefit from statin therapy and an increased risk of having
cardiovascular events (Arterioscler Thromb Vasc Biol, April 1, 2004).
Doctors have discovered that injections of a certain substance can
reverse heart disease in some patients. The therapy has helped reduce
the amount of plaque in the arteries, thereby negating the need for
angioplasty and open heart surgery. That substance is HDL-cholesterol
(www.ivanhoe.com/newsalert,
March 1, 2004).
The Melbourne Women’s Midlife Health Project measured cholesterol
levels annually in a group of 326 women aged 52-63 years. During the
eighth annual visit, subjects took a test that assessed memory. They
found that higher serum concentrations of LDL-cholesterol and
relatively recent increases in total cholesterol and LDL-cholesterol
were associated with better memory in healthy middle-aged women (J
Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry 2003;74:1530-1535.)
Read the Fine Print
The
picture in a recent ad for Lipitor implies that cholesterol-lowering
is for everyone, even slim young women. However, in the fine print we
learn that Lipitor “has not been shown to prevent heart disease or
heart attacks”! If the makers of Lipitor need to provide this
disclaimer, after millions of dollars invested in studies, why should
anyone risk side effects by taking their drug?

About the Author
Mary G. Enig, PhD
is the author of Know Your
Fats: The Complete Primer for Understanding the Nutrition of Fats,
Oils, and Cholesterol, Bethesda Press, May 2000. Order
your copy here:
www.enig.com/trans.html.
Sally Fallon
is the author of Nourishing
Traditions: The Cookbook that Challenges Politically Correct Nutrition
and the Diet Dictocrats, and
Eat Fat, Lose Fat (both
with Mary G. Enig, PhD), as well as of numerous articles on the
subject of diet and health. She is President of the Weston A. Price
Foundation and founder of
A Campaign for Real Milk. She is the mother of four healthy
children raised on whole foods including butter, cream, eggs and meat.
This
article appeared in
Wise Traditions in Food,
Farming and the Healing Arts,
the quarterly magazine of the Weston A. Price Foundation,
SPRING 2004.
Click here to become a member of the Foundation
and receive our quarterly journal, full of informative articles as
well as sources of healthy food.
Copyright Notice:
The material on this site is copyrighted by the Weston A. Price
Foundation. Please contact the Foundation for permission if you wish
to use the material for any purpose.
Disclaimer:
The information published herein is not intended to be used
as a substitute for appropriate care by a qualified health
practitioner.
The Weston A. Price Foundation
PMB 106-380, 4200 Wisconsin Ave., NW, Washington DC 20016
Phone: (202) 363-4394 | Fax: (202) 363-4396 | Web:
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was posted on 14 JUN 2004.
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