Daily Mail

Could exercise beat statin side effects?

It can prevent agony of muscle pain, study suggests

- By Victoria Allen Science Correspond­ent

MODERATE exercise may be the best way to beat the most common side effect from taking statins.

Physical activity is thought to stop the muscle pain which can come with taking the cholestero­l-busting drugs.

Around six million Britons take statins, which prevent heart attacks and strokes by lowering ‘bad’ cholestero­l and cost only £20 a year per patient. However, up to one in five give up the pills because of muscle pain, and doctors believe tens of thousands die every year through not taking them.

Evidence that around seven in ten profession­al athletes cannot tolerate statins due to muscle pain has added to the belief that exercise makes the side effect worse.

But scientists funded by the British Heart Foundation have now found moderate exercise could actually help, after identifyin­g the cause of sore and weak muscles. Their study, using rats and muscle biopsies from patients taking statins longterm, found the drugs cause calcium leaks from muscle cells.

The researcher­s, at the University of Leeds and Sweden’s Karolinska Institute, discovered rats did not suffer the same leakage after running on a wheel – suggesting moderate exercise can stop muscle pain in statin takers. The study’s author, Leeds’ Dr Sarah Calaghan, said: ‘The idea that exercise makes statin side effects worse might be a misconcept­ion – what matters is the intensity of exercise. Moderate exercise cancelled out the changes in muscle cells caused by statins.

‘After 20 years of searching, we finally have an explanatio­n for statin-associated muscle pain, along with a possible solution. If you weren’t convinced to exercise already, here’s another reason.’

The study, in JACC: Basic to Translatio­nal Science, found statins compromise proteins which control the release of calcium from muscle cells.

This calcium’s release helps the muscles contract so we

‘What matters is the intensity’

can move – but irregular leaks of calcium can trigger signals which cause muscle cells to die in patients whose genes put them at risk.

The resulting muscle pain is thought to be worse in those who exercise intensely for long periods, as they are already putting a lot of strain on their muscles. But those who exercise moderately may improve their endurance, and stop changes which lead to pain.

After four weeks on statins, those rats which exercised showed no signs of changes to the proteins or signals which cause cells to die.

The researcher­s have not yet shown that calcium leaks lead to muscle pain in humans, but say their findings could still help doctors identify those at risk of the side effect.

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