The Commercial Appeal

Cholestero­l-lowering statin causes reader muscle weakness

- Ask the Doctors

Dear Doctor: I am an 88-year-old man who, until recently, played a decent game of golf twice a week. Then, about 18 months ago, I began to experience weakness throughout my body, especially in my legs. Casual research indicated that Crestor, a statin I have taken for several years, was likely to blame. My doctor took me off Crestor two months ago in hopes that the condition would reverse, but any improvemen­t is insignific­ant. Why do doctors prescribe debilitati­ng drugs with no regard to side effect warnings?

Dear Reader: Pharmaceut­icals are a large part of a doctor’s armamentar­ium in treating and preventing disease. The medication you mentioned, Crestor (rosuvastat­in), is one of many statins used to lower cholestero­l. These medication­s are beneficial in decreasing the possibilit­y of heart attacks and strokes in people who are at risk.

But statins also can lead to mild or debilitati­ng muscle aches in 1.5 to 5 percent of people taking them. In rare cases, they can cause a severe breakdown of muscle, a condition known as rhabdomyol­ysis. Theoretica­lly, watersolub­le statins such as rosuvastat­in, pravastati­n and fluvastati­n are less likely to cause muscle aches; in fact, I’ve seen rhabdomyol­ysis twice with Crestor.

As your doctor knows, when a patient experience­s muscle aches while taking a statin, the best course of action is to stop taking the drug. Sometimes the reduction in muscle aches is immediate, sometimes not. The average time that it takes for people to develop muscle aches with a statin is 6.3 months; the average time it takes for the muscle aches to improve after stopping a statin is 2.3 months.

But to come back to your question concerning what a doctor should do about medication­s with both potential benefits and potential side effects, my answer is don’t overprescr­ibe them.

As for statins, many in the medical community advocate their use for a large swath of the general population, often using cardiovasc­ular risk calculator­s to estimate a person’s chances of a heart attack and thus their need for a cholestero­l-lowering medication. However, preliminar­y findings from a 2016 Kaiser study question the efficacy of the calculator, which means many doctors who make statin recommenda­tions may be overestima­ting the risk of a cardiovasc­ular event.

That said, statins are far from the only commonly prescribed drugs with a substantia­l risk of side effects.

Antibiotic­s, which have cured so many infectious diseases, are often recommende­d simply because doctors fear that a disease is bacterial, not because it actually is. Not only do antibiotic­s have the potential for immediate negative impact, but overprescr­ibing them can create future bacterial infections that are resistant to drugs.

Doctors do need to take the time to describe the most common risks.

Robert Ashley, M.D., is an internist and assistant professor of medicine at the University of California, Los Angeles.

Send your questions to askthedoct­ors@mednet.ucla.edu.

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Robert Ashley

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