September 2, 2007
On July of 2005 I had my annual physical exam at the VA clinic.which showed I was in good health. On the day following the exam the doctor's nurse called me to inform me that the doctor had prescribed Zocor for me because of her concern that that my cholesterol level was to high (238).I took the precribed dosage (20 mg per day) 40 times over a period of 54 days starting on the first or second week in August. On the 27th of September I collapsed while going upstairs in my townhouse. My legs had very little strength.I immediately stopped taking the drug thinking that it may be the cause of my condition.
From that moment onward I began experiencing pain in my calves and and right shoulder, and numbness in my legs below my knees and feet. My condition continued to worsen even though I had stopped taking the drug. On the 3rd of October my blood pressure had risen to about 155/110 which is extremely high for me as my blood pressure usually is about 105/70.I admitted myself immediately to the emergency ward of a local hospital because the VA Clinic was about a 45 minute drive away.( I admited myself again on the eighth of October for the same reason). I was given a pill to bring the blood pressure down. I told the doctor that in addition to numbness and extreme weekness in my legs I had pins and needles effect in my finger tips, inability to bend the first digit of my left finger at the second joint and pain in my right shoulder and calves. The doctor recommended to the VA that I should be checked for neuropathy.
I called my doctor at the VA Clinic for an appointment. She told me to stop taking the drug if I had not already done so. She thought that my condition might be caused by a pinched nerve and scheduled a test to verify if indeed it was, as well as a MRI to determine if I may have suffered a stroke, and a blood test to determine whether I had liver damage. All the test results were negative. She then made an appointment for me to see the VA neurologist which was set for the following week. The neurologist tested me for muscle weekness and peripheral nerve sensitivity and found that I had muscle weekness in my legs and fingers and severe peripheral neuropathy in both my legs and hands. His prognosis was not very encouraging especially when he told me that sometimes peripheral neuropathy would disappear over time but sometimes it would not.
My condition worsened to the point that I had to use a cane (and later a walker) to get around. During the appointment with my VA doctor to review the neurologists findings my doctor concluded that the drug Zocor was probably the cause of my condition since I did not have a diabetes condition and the tests conducted by the VA and the emergency ward of the HealthFirst Hospital revealed no other cause. I told her that my highest priority at that time was to regain the strength in my legs and requested that I attend physical therapy at the VA, which she arranged.
I attended the therapy classes and I performed the prescribed excercises at home until some time in March, 2006 when the therapist was convinced that I had recovered sufficient muscle strength and coordination in my legs to walk with a cane, and ordered my release from the therapy at the VA
Now, I have recovered most of the muscle strength in my legs and I don't need a cane to walk. The peripheral neuropathy condition has disappeared in most of the affected areas of my legs but the neuropathy persists around the ankles, the balls of my feet and toes and a narrow area extending from my toes to about three inches above the ankle in both legs. I still experience fatigue pain in my leg muscles and tendons when I walk and the tendons and muscles of my legs feel extremely tight.
I have taken no drugs except aspirin since I took blood pressure pills at the initial stages of the lengthy, injurous and painful condition caused by the Zocor drug ( I remember the VA doctor saying that I should recover from the side effects in about one week after discontinuing taking the drug). I have been treating the condition by taking 30 milligrams of CoQ10 supplement daily since November 2005, and by doing daily leg excercises.