Last year my husband went through a Wellness program at the Cooper Clinic in Dallas. The clinic is founded by Dr. Kenneth Cooper who is also known as the father of Aerobics for any of you who were runners in the 70's. It is a great facility. Hubby had been having heart palpitations, high blood pressure, feeling bad in general at only 53 years. He was also 40 lbs overweight. As part of the program they determined his % body fat the most accurate way - in a pool. From the body fat measurement they determined his ideal weight. At the same time he went back on the evil Vytorin and some BP meds. He lost 40 lbs and is now at what was supposed to be his "ideal" weight. He used to be quite muscular despite the excess weight carried in the tummy. Now he looks thinner but not as toned and fit as you would expect from the workout regimine he has kept up for 11 months plus the weight loss.
I am 52, female and 7 weeks ago I started working out (running and elliptical machine) to get back in shape. I have lost 6 lbs and toned up so that I dropped a dress size. I went from 150 to 144, I am 5' 8" tall and have a large frame. It does not make sense to me that in 7 weeks I have more muscle which people have noticed, and my husband has worked out 9 months longer and seems to have lost as much muscle as fat. Everyone notices the weight loss but, as atheletic as he, is I am concerned the statins have robbed him of muscle mass. He was taking some CoQ and vitamins thanks to the Cooper Clinic or it would be so much worse.
I initially found this forum while researching the behavioral issues that reared their ugly heads, but now that he quit the Vytorin and has turned back into the nice man I married, instead of the evil person I saw a few months ago, I am noticing the other things discussed here with muscle and joint problems. He had shoulder surgery 2 years ago and in the past few months the post surgical progress in range of motion has gone backwards a year or more, very stiff and hurting all the time.
I have read many stories of people going from healthy and active to couch potatos due to statin related problems. If some study could figure out which population groups suffer most from statins it would help figure out who should never touch the stuff.
My question is: has anyone ever done a body fat measurement study before and after statins? I have seen info on muscle damage and various other measurements. If the muscles are damaged and not working properly either one's weight goes down due to muscle loss or body fat increases as fat replaces lost muscle. I would really be interested in the results of such a study. Is my observation of muscle mass lost vs fat lost just anecdotal or in a larger study would it be statistically significant?