[quote="sos_group_owner"]Re: What I don't understand is why this seemed to hit all at once.
Hi "shadoww",
As you've probably read, statins cause CoQ10 deficiency. I believe (from
my husband's experience) that even when someone takes CoQ10 with
statins, the statins are using the same CoQ10 pathway and that person
might not get anough CoQ10 benefit.
CoQ10 deficiency can occur slowly. My husband took 100 mg of
CoQ10 with Lipitor 10 mg. Later, 10 mg was increased to 20 mg, but
we didn't increase his CoQ10. Over the course of a couple of years, he
experienced increased neck/shoulder pain/stiffness, short term memory
loss that progressed to several bouts of TGA, dark/splotchy pigment
all around the neck area, aggitation & anger, muscle atrophy and
probably a few I've missed. All of these were attributed to "getting older",
or some other lame excuse.
You might also want to read this article by Dr Graveline:
"The McCully Heart Protection Diet"
http://www.spacedoc.net/mccully.htm
Re: I've pretty much made up my mind I'm not taking those lipids drugs
again.
When you eat something that contains "sugar, flour or rice", remember
the pain you experienced with Zocor, Vytorin and Lipitor. Statins are
appropiate for a very small portion of very high risk patients. If your
only risk factors are high triglycerides and mildly elevate LDL, you are
NOT a high risk patient. Your triglycerides can be controlled with
proper diet and elevated LDL cholesterol is not the problem; it's when LDL
cholesterol become "oxidized", primarily due to elevated homocysteine.
Another good article to read:
"Cholesterol Levels & Cardiovascular Disease"
http://www.spacedoc.net/cholesterol.html
Ask your doctor to check your homocysteine levels. You might get a
blank look or just get brushed off. There is no safe levels of homocysteine
(Hcy), but optimal levels should be 6.2 or less, although most labs say
that as high as 11.4 is OK. Folic acid, B6 and B12 control Hcy, and no
side effects. B vitamins are part of Dr Graveline's "Statin Alternatives":
http://www.spacedoc.net/statin_alternatives.htm
Fran[/quote]
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Thanks Fran. What exactly does it mean when you say the cholesterol becomes "oxidized"? Is that the same thing as "inflammation" and how do you know if you're inflamed, cholesterol wise? I know I'm already "inflamed" with my dr. for putting me on this junk a few years ago and the way its making me hurt!!!!