Posts Tagged ‘Statin’

Review: Muscle pain due to statins

Friday, July 3rd, 2009

Statins are probably the best medications to reduce cholesterol level and also have associated anti-inflammatory activities. Both these properties lead to a marked decrease in atherosclerosis and related diseases.

Muscle pain is quite common in people (up to 10%) who take one of the several statins for lowering their cholesterol levels. However, there is no strict consensus on how to define, diagnose and manage such muscle pains.

The Annals of Internal Medicine recently published an excellent review on “Statin related myopathy.” Here is a brief summary of the article.

Definition:

There is no consensus definition. Each group (ACC/AHA, FDA etc) have their own definitions. For most clinical purposes the following definitions should be adequate:

Myopathy: Muscle disease with creatine kinase > 10 time upper limit

Rhabdomyolysis: Creatine kinase elevation with end organ damage

Pathophysiology:

Incompletely understood. Proposed mechanisms include:

  1. Decreased cholesterol content of skeletal myocyte membrane leading to instabilty
  2. Depletion of isoprenoids and/or coenzyme Q10
  3. Mitochondrial dysfunction

Risk factors for developing myopathy:

  • Advanced age
  • Smaller body size
  • Multi-system diseases (including hypothyroidism)
  • Alcoholism
  • Major surgery, excess physical activity
  • History of myopathy while on other lipid lowering agent
  • Family history
  • Higher doses of statin
  • Interaction with other drugs leading to increased bio-availability of statins

Clinical Features:

Major site of muscle pain were in the thighs, calves or it was generalized. Pain was described as heaviness, stiffness or cramping and sometimes was associated with exertion. Physical exertion was a common trigger of myalgia. Tendon pain may also be present.

Management:

  • Check creatine kinase (CK) levels in high risk patients
  • If CK levels > 10 times upper limit, stop statin
  • Re-initiate statin with a lower dose once CK levels return to normal
  • Try switching to fluvastain (better tolerated) or rosuvastatin (less interaction with other medications)
  • Atorvastatin and Rosuvastatin have long half life and can be administered on alternate days
  • Trial of other lipid lowering agents (e.g. Bile acid binders, ezetimibe, niacin etc)
  • Co-enzyme Q10 supplementation may tried. No clear benefit but is very safe.

Cholesterol education videos

Saturday, November 15th, 2008

Cholesterol is a normal constituent of the human body. However excess cholesterol (hypercholesterolemia or sometimes called dyslipidemia) is one of the most important risk factors for developing heart attack and stroke.

Here are a couple of videos on cholesterol explaining why is cholesterol important to the body, how it causes disease and what lifestyle changes are required to decrease excess cholesterol.

What does high cholesterol do? (Time 4:11 min)


Lifestyle changes for high cholesterol (Time 7:40 min)


Brand Name Vs Generics

Thursday, September 25th, 2008

This Medco analysis implies that the perceived therapeutic benefit of generics over brand name in the minds of patients may not be that significant as earlier thought.

The analysis also reveals that reaching the Coverage Gap dramatically stimulates the use of generics among all Medicare recipients. During the initial phase of the benefit, when the plan provides drug coverage, one-third of the medications used daily by beneficiaries were generics and two-thirds were brand-name drugs. Once beneficiaries reached the Gap and were responsible for the full cost of the drug, those numbers flip – generic usage rises to 71 percent and brand-name use falls to 29 percent.

Brand Name Lipitor Vs.jpg Generic Simvastatin

What other factors could be playing a role and how do we counteract it?

Reference: Medco, ACP Internist