I was started on lovastatin a month ago. My cholesterol wasn't that bad, but I have a family history of heart disease, so my doctor thought it wise to put me on a low dose.
That sounded reasonable to me. Having a heart attack doesn't seem like fun.
I was already living a healthy lifestyle. I exercise at least 6 days a week, and I eat lots of fruits and vegetables and whole grains and lean meat and chicken and fish, and avoid most processed foods and desserts that are high in sugar and fat.
A week or so after taking lovastatin I noticed my quadriceps were hurting. The pain was radiating into both knees. I didn't have that before, so I decided to cut back to 1/2 a pill per day. I had only been taking 10 mg, so now I was taking 5, less than the recommended dose. Within a few days the pain was reduced but not gone.
A week later I figured maybe lovastatin had not caused the pain, so I increased the dose to 1 pill per day - 10 mg.
Four days after that the pain came back with a vengeance. On a scale of 1-10, the pain was a 9.5. I was in excruciating pain.
There was no question in my mind that lovastatin at the lowest dose had caused this pain. I haven't taken any lovastatin for days. I also bought some coenzyme q 10 and started taking that, along with ibuprofen 3 times a day. I'm messaging my quads, and icing them. I think the pain might have subsided a little at this time. I hope I return to normal.
Mayo Clinic's web site says it takes 2 weeks for statin induced pain to go away. I hope mine does.
The American Heart Association's web site says that 20% of people taking statins wind up with muscle pain. From what I'd read in other places, the pain from statins is not common. 20% can't be defined as not common, in my view.
In my opinion they are over-prescribing this medication. I could see it if someone has an extremely high LDL and low HDL. I can see if if someone has had a heart attack. But for normal healthy people with reasonable cholesterol levels, I don't think it's wise to risk this drug. I think the medical community needs to revamp its recommendations regarding the prescribing of statins.
If I'd known then what I know now, I never would have started taking it.