by bucho » Wed Oct 11, 2006 7:47 pm
Yes, in my experience the issue is more about recovering natural processes that were suppressed by the statin, long after you have gotten the statin itself out of your system. I was also on 20 mg simvastatin, in my case for about 3 years. Then rather suddenly I erupted in a wide range of alarming symptoms, mostly neurological but also muscular, that stumped my doctor (and me) for about 3 months. I thought I had Lyme disease, encephalitus, meningitis, and/or spine injuries. But I was also getting older, going from age 49 to 52, and now in retrospect I think my body was just beginning to lose the Q10 battle that up until then it had been winning. Remember, Q10 affects every cell, so its loss can show up in numerous symptoms.
Anyway, it was me, not my doctor, who finally found this website and decided to try stopping the statin. My doctor said, "I would have never caught it." Now at six months since stopping, there is no doubt that the statin was the cause of all my problems. I think I'm about at the 90-percent recovery point now, but a month ago that was not the case. Last week, for the first time, I was able to exercise without repercussions! Up until last week, I have had exercise intolerance that would leave me fatigued for days after a workout. I have waited for this aspect of recovery for a long time, and have wondered if it would never come to pass. FYI, I have been taking 300 mg Q10 daily. Very few symptoms remain, although I still get tinnitus and chattery teeth from time to time, but in general I'm thrilled with my very slow, but now very substantial, recovery.