It's been 18 days since I stopped taking lovastatin because of severe muscle pain in my back and legs and knees. I'd taken it for a month and 3 days at a rate of 10 mg, the lowest dose.
The pain is less: about a 3 on a scale of 1-10. It had gone higher than 9 when I quit. I could barely walk. I could no longer swim or hike. My memory was failing. I was a walking disaster area.
My resting heart rate went up to 60, which makes me suspect the lovastatin affected my heart muscle, since my resting heart rate has been 50 for years. I'm athletic.
I don't believe I have rhabdomyolysis because my urine is clear and the muscles in my upper body have not been affected. However, I am having my CKP tested.
My cholesterol numbers before being prescribed lovastatin were:
LDL 120
HDL 49
triglycerides 53
total cholesterol 180
I exercise 7 days a week. I eat low fat, lots of fruits and vegetables, lean meat, chicken and fish, and whole grains and nuts. I don't drink. I don't smoke. I don't take illegal drugs.
I should not have been put on a statin.
By the standards of 5 years ago I wouldn't have been. They used to say statins were for people with an LDL above 130.
But the FDA and pharmaceutical companies have determined it's best to keep LDL below 100. In fact they want it as low as 70.
From everything I've read and experienced, those levels are dangerous.
I would not want to be the one to proclaim that the FDA and big Pharmaceutical companies could be in bed together, and are perpetrating a hoax on the world to make hundreds of billions a year in profits, in spite of the damage these drugs do to large numbers of people.
But I do suggest that everyone do their homework and investigate these drugs before filling a prescription for it.
One statin manufacturer has petitioned the FDA to have doctors prescribe their drug for healthy people with no risk of heart disease, as a preventative medicine.
I remember a quote from the Bible: Money is the root of much evil.
Be advised. Do your homework. In my humble opine, exercise and diet are the best options for preventing heart disease.
For those who have had a heart attack and/or are healthy but refuse to stop eating fast food 3 times a day, and exercise regularly, go ahead, take statins if you like. But I wouldn't. I'd give up the fast food, get on the exercise plan, and tell my doctor to ... have a nice day.
pOps