I'm Baaack! Visit w/ Dr L. went OK. Nothing new about my condition to report. They took blood to measure CoQ10 levels again; I won't see results until next week. He did say to listen to my heart and if it told me it was getting too much of a workout I should slow down and rest a bit. He did repeat that the heart muscle HAS suffered some damage consistent with Statin-related side effects, and that I should not exert TOO much while the muscle is recovering. Now to the questions.
Ray Holder:
Any opinion on ALC's restorative aspects in muscle wastage situations?
A. He is aware that ALC does work for some, and those who get relief should continue using it. He knows of cases where ALC does NOT make a noticable difference; so, it's recuperative power and value is on a case-by-case basis.
And he does remember you and said to tell you "hello".
Biologist:
Any rumors of a book on Statin-related damage recovery?
A. None that he has heard of.
Any defined time to recovery or trends toward that sort of definition?
A. His experience is all over the board: anywhere from six weeks (approximately) to years with some never recovering everything that was lost. He did say that his study of patients over a two yr period showed the musculature improving first, followed by the resolution of other symptoms, and the final and hardest recovery reserved for neurological side effects. He thought there was some work done in this area by Beatrice Golumb (he wasn't sure of the spelling) of the UCSD study group.
Any common traits among those who recover quickly and/or those who do not?
A. He feels there is some genetic predisposition to Statin over-sensitivity, but that is purely suspicion and supposition on his part, and he could not be more definitive.
Any opinion to Cinnamon as a 'stealth' Statin.
A. This was a left field ball for him and he didn't have any opinion about it.
Is LDL a transport mechanism for CoQ10, ViT. E, etc?
A. Yes, it is. Another problem is that TOO MUCH Vit E interferes with absorption of CoQ10.
Deb: (Carbuffmom) is there any link between Statins and ALS onset or ALS-like symptomology?
A: Yes, there is; in fact, there is a new paper on just that subject: "Statins, neuromuscular degenerative disease and an amyotrophic lateral sclerosis-like syndrome: an analysis of individual case safety reports from vigibase" It's a WHO Foundation paper and one of the authors is listed as
*ralph.edwards@who-umc.org
He is associated with the Uppsala Monitoring Center (UMC) in Uppsala, Sweden. I was able to read parts of the paper and some of the content read is as follows: "... some arguments for considering that a spectrum of severe neuromuscular damage may be associated with Statin use..." and "...Aim of this paper is to present upper motor neuron lesion cases, with other evidence, as a signal of relationship between Statins and an ALS-like syndrome." If those words are not exact, they are very close to exact. Finally, I have not Googled the above information for further clarification and will leave that to you. Good luck!
Oh, yes. Biologist: I HAVE read the manual/paper I referenced and recommend it. It is concise and filled with useful information for any sufferer. I got it just before I went on vacation and only read it through a few days ago.
Some Chapter headings are:
Recovery after statin-induced degradation.
(what to take including a "most important" menu)
FAQ's blah, blah
Vitamin C rundown
Maintenance Regimen for Recovery
Acute Illness Regimen
Safe and Unsafe Cardiovascular Protocols
Nothing startlingly new, but a good encapsulation of useful information. As someone recently wrote, and I paraphrase: "I read everything. Even one little bit of new information may be valuable."
Regards,
Brooks