More statin apologists. These people still are not focusing on the real problem. Stop the inflammation!
http://medicalxpress.com/news/2015-01-dispute-drugs-high-cholesterol-impair.html
Researchers question whether there is substance to the US Food and
Drug Agency's recent warning that statins could affect the memory,
attention span and other cognitive abilities of people who take this
drug to control high cholesterol. This follows a systematic review of 25
clinical trials incorporating nearly 47,000 people. It was led by Brian
R. Ott, M.D., director of The Alzheimer's Disease & Memory
Disorders Center at Rhode Island Hospital and professor at the Alpert
Medical School of Brown University in the U.S. The review findings
appear in the
Journal of General Internal Medicine.
Since 2012, the FDA regulates that labels on statin packaging should warn that the drugs could change users'
cognitive abilities. These cognitive changes could include
attention span,
problem solving, memory, and language or visuospatial abilities. The
warning was based on surveillance and case reports, observational
studies and randomized trials.
Subsequent reviews of available research have cast doubts on the
cautionary stance taken by the FDA. Ott's team therefore set out to do a
more comprehensive analysis using well-studied analysis methods. They
scrutinized the data of 25 relevant randomized
clinical trials
that investigated a possible link between statin therapy and mental
ability. Combined, these studies included the test results of 46,836
patients. Ott and his colleagues also contrasted and combined the
results of 14 of these studies through a meta-analysis, which in total
included 27,643 participants.
The review found no significant effect of statin use on the mental
capacity of people with normal brain functioning or even those with
Alzheimers' disease. The results suggest that the FDA's statin warning
should be re-evaluated. Ott also believes there is a need to investigate
the reasons behind the differences in the review results and the
initial reports on which the FDA warning was based. It could be that
some of the mental changes that were reported in the case studies were
the result of overdosing with statins.
The review findings are congruent with the 2013 safety statement made
by the American College of Cardiology and the American Heart
Association Cholesterol Guideline. It advises that patients on statins
who seem to be confused or who might have memory problems should be
evaluated for causes other than their cholesterol medication. This could
include the use of other drugs or systemic and neuro-psychiatric
causes.
The researchers believe that there is more benefit to be had by
sticking to statin therapy to manage heart-related diseases and prevent
strokes than worrying about the possible adverse mental effects of these
drugs.
"We found no significant effects of statin treatment on cognition,"
concludes Ott. "Given these results, it is questionable whether the FDA
class warning about potential cognitive adverse effects of statins is
still warranted."
1. It is easy for able-bodied people to say we should stop worrying about the adverse effect of statins on cognition.
ReplyDelete2. I have less "brain fog" in the morning since I asked my doctor to cut my statin dose in half.