Just Say No to Statins

Via Mercola

Story at-a-glance

  • Widespread myths about lowering your cholesterol with statins to improve your heart health still permeate modern medicine
  • A comprehensive review of the literature, published in 2018, found that LDL cholesterol does not cause heart disease, so statins’ ability to lower LDL is of dubious value
  • Over a five-year period, taking a statin once you’ve had a heart attack will only increase your life expectancy by four days
  • Just like COVID-19, they manipulated the statistics and grossly exaggerated statin benefits by conflating relative and absolute risks. If you take a statin, your chance of a heart attack is only 1.1% lower than if you’re not taking it: that is your absolute, not relative, risk
  • Even though public health perpetuates the notion that lower LDL cholesterol is better, there’s no consistent relationship between lowering LDL with statins and death, heart attack or stroke

In the U.S. alone, 40 million adults take statin cholesterol-lowering medications in the mistaken belief that this will reduce their risk of heart disease.1 But lowering your cholesterol is not the panacea to heart health that you’ve been led to believe.

On “The Joe Rogan Experience,” Dr. Aseem Malhotra, an interventional cardiologist consultant from the U.K., speaks out about the overprescribing of statins for heart disease — and the widespread myths about cholesterol and your heart that still permeate modern medicine.2

Only Extremely High Levels Were a Problem

The Framingham Study, which began in 1948, involved 5,209 people from Massachusetts.3 It was instrumental in starting the myth that high total cholesterol is a major risk factor for heart disease, but what many people don’t realize is the correlation only existed if cholesterol was over 300 milligrams per deciliter (mg/dl). “Very few people have total cholesterol that high,” Malhotra says.4

Further, he believes, your cholesterol levels are 80% genetics. In your body, cholesterol is necessary for maintaining cell membranes and it plays a role in the immune system and synthesizing hormones and vitamin D.

In the Framingham Study, the majority of people with cholesterol levels over 300 mg/dl had a genetic condition called familial hyperlipidemia, which leads to very high levels of cholesterol. About 1 in 250 people have this condition, according to Malhotra.5

What also wasn’t widely publicized about the Framingham Study was what occurred in people who were in their 50s, 60s and beyond. In this age range, as cholesterol dropped, mortality rate increased. “So, the association of cholesterol and heart disease is quite weak, first and foremost,” Malhotra says.6

Malhotra and colleagues conducted a study to determine if a correlation exists with lowering LDL cholesterol and total cholesterol and preventing heart attacks and strokes, and no clear correlation was found. “This is based upon randomized, controlled trial data, so this is the most robust evidence you can get,” he says.7

LDL Cholesterol Doesn’t Cause Heart Disease

In the context of statins, Malhotra says, they do lower LDL cholesterol, but they also have anti-inflammatory and anti-clotting properties, and this is where any benefit comes in for preventing heart attacks and strokes. However, if you’re at low risk of heart disease, this benefit amounts to only about 1%. Among those who’ve had a heart attack, the benefits aren’t much better. Malhotra explains:8

“What are those benefits when you break them down in absolute terms? … Over a five-year period, if you take your statin religiously and don’t get side effects — because … the trials took out people with side effects — the best-case scenario is 1 in 83 for saving your life and 1 in 39 in preventing a further heart attack. Now, a lot of people find that quite underwhelming.”

He also points out that, over that five-year period, taking a statin once you’ve had a heart attack will only increase your life expectancy by four days.9 Further, a comprehensive review of the literature, published in 2018, found that LDL cholesterol does not cause heart disease, so statins’ ability to lower LDL is of dubious value:

“For half a century, a high level of total cholesterol (TC) or low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C) has been considered to be the major cause of atherosclerosis and cardiovascular disease (CVD), and statin treatment has been widely promoted for cardiovascular prevention.

However, there is an increasing understanding that the mechanisms are more complicated and that statin treatment, in particular when used as primary prevention, is of doubtful benefit.”

The review delved into three reviews published by statin advocates, which claimed to support the LDL cholesterol-heart disease link.

However, the authors noted, serious errors were involved in their research, along with other “obvious falsification of the cholesterol hypothesis … the conclusions of the authors of the three reviews are based on misleading statistics, exclusion of unsuccessful trials and by ignoring numerous contradictory observations.”10 They further stated:11

“The idea that high cholesterol levels in the blood are the main cause of CVD is impossible because people with low levels become just as atherosclerotic as people with high levels and their risk of suffering from CVD is the same or higher.”

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Statins Don’t Protect Your Heart

Despite the questions surrounding their safety and effectiveness, statins are recommended for four broad patient populations:12

  1. Those who have already had a cardiovascular event
  2. Adults with diabetes
  3. Individuals with LDL cholesterol levels ≥190 mg/dL
  4. Individuals with an estimated 10-year cardiovascular risk ≥7.5% (based on algorithm that uses your age, gender, blood pressure, total cholesterol, high density lipoproteins (HDL), race and history of diabetes to predict the likelihood you’ll experience a heart attack in the coming 10 years)

Even though statins are prescribed for these sizeable groups, and “target” cholesterol levels have been achieved, a systematic review of 35 randomized, controlled trials found that no additional benefits were gained. An analysis in BMJ Evidence-Based Medicine by Malhotra and colleagues revealed:13

“Recommending cholesterol lowering treatment based on estimated cardiovascular risk fails to identify many high-risk patients and may lead to unnecessary treatment of low-risk individuals. The negative results of numerous cholesterol lowering randomized controlled trials call into question the validity of using low density lipoprotein cholesterol as a surrogate target for the prevention of cardiovascular disease.”

Even in the case of recurrent cardiovascular events — and despite an increase in statin use from 1999 to 2013 — researchers writing in BMC Cardiovascular Disorders noted, “there was only a small decrease in the incidence of recurrent CVD, and this occurred mainly in older patients without statins prescribed.”14

Cholesterol Treatment Trialists Monopolize Statin Debate

Rory Collins heads up the Cholesterol Treatment Trialists’ (CTT) collaboration, a group of doctors and scientists who analyze study data and report their findings to regulators and policymakers.15 Collins coauthored a 2008 study16 that claims statins lower your risk of heart attack by 36%.

Table 417 in this study shows the rate of heart attack in the placebo group was 3.1% while the statin group’s rate was 2% — a 36% reduction in relative risk. However, the absolute risk reduction — the actual difference between the two groups, i.e., 3.1% minus 2% — is only 1.1%, which isn’t very impressive.

In the real world, if you take a statin your chance of a heart attack is only 1.1% lower than if you’re not taking it, as Malhotra told Joe Rogan. Just like COVID-19, the drug companies manipulated their statistics and grossly exaggerated statin benefits by conflating relative and absolute risks.

Collins is also noteworthy, as he spearheaded an attack against Malhotra by contacting the British Medical Journal and demanding it retract one of Malhotra’s studies, which cited a statistic that statins cause side effects in 18% to 20% of people who take them.18 Rather than retract the study, an independent panel reviewed the study, calling only for a correction to be added:19

“The corrections explain that, although the 18-20% figure was based on statements in the referenced observational study by Zhang et al — which said that “the rate of reported statin related events to statins was nearly 18%,” the articles in The BMJ did not reflect necessary caveats and did not take sufficient account of the uncontrolled nature of the data of Zhang et al.”

Malhotra pointed out that, had the article been retracted, it would have been career-destroying for him, as it would have damaged his credibility. “I was on trial, essentially, for two months,” he says, “and it was very tough.” But when the panel came back, it voted 6-0, unanimous in favor of Malhotra’s study. “There was no call for retraction.”20

No Relationship Between LDL, Risk of Heart Attack

Other research has also found unimpressive results for statin treatment, including a systematic review and meta-analysis of 21 trials21 using similar criteria to the CTT.22

One of the authors, Maryanne Demasi, Ph.D., explained the study “found no consistent relationship between lowering LDL-C with statins and death, heart attack or stroke,” even though the “public health mantra about cholesterol has always been ‘the lower the better.’”23,24 It also once again highlighted the misleading nature of using relative risk reduction in place of absolute risk:25

“Statins are very effective at lowering LDL-C, but in some trials, that did not necessarily translate into a meaningful benefit for the patient. This contradicts the prevailing view, promoted by the CTT, that there is a strong “linear” relationship between lowering LDL-C and cardiovascular outcomes from statin therapy.

Our analysis also highlighted the significant difference in the relative risk reduction (RRR) and absolute risk reduction (ARR) of statin therapy on death, heart attack and stroke.

For example, if your baseline risk of having a heart attack is 2% and taking a drug reduces that risk to 1%, then in relative terms you halved your risk (50% RRR) which sounds impressive, but in absolute terms, you have only reduced your risk by 1% (ARR).

Our analysis showed that trial participants taking a statin for an average of 4.4 years, showed a 29% RRR in heart attacks, but the ARR was only 1.3%. If this is not effectively communicated to a patient, can they make a fully informed decision about their treatment?”

Statins Will Wreck Your Health

In short, statin drugs have not derailed the rising trend of heart disease, and instead have put users at increased risk of health conditions linked to their use, such as diabetes,26,27 dementia28 and others, including:

  • Cancer29
  • Cataracts30
  • Musculoskeletal disorders, including myalgia, muscle weakness, muscle cramps, rhabdomyolysis and autoimmune muscle disease31
  • Depression32

In the event you’re taking statins, be aware that they deplete your body of coenzyme Q10 (CoQ10) and inhibit the synthesis of vitamin K2. The risks of CoQ10 depletion can be somewhat offset by taking a coenzyme Q10 supplement or, if you’re over 40, its reduced form ubiquinol. But ultimately, if you’re looking to protect both your brain and heart health, avoiding statin drugs and instead optimizing your diet.

If you’re interested in learning more about your individual heart disease risk, don’t rely on total cholesterol or LDL on their own. You can get a more accurate idea of your risk of heart disease with the following tests:

Omega-3 index HDL/total cholesterol ratio
Fasting insulin level Fasting blood sugar level
Triglyceride/HDL ratio Iron level

I personally would never take or prescribe a statin drug as there are far better options that directly address the underlying and foundational causes of high cholesterol. The primary one, as most of you know, is to radically reduce and ideally eliminate all processed foods.

This is because nearly all processed foods contain seed oils and processed sugar in the form of high fructose corn syrup, both of which contribute strongly to virtually every chronic degenerative disease, including the most common ones of heart disease, cancer and diabetes.

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19 Comments
WTF
WTF
May 27, 2023 7:30 am

The push to lower cholesterol, amazingly coincides with the alarming uptick in Alzheimers.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  WTF
May 27, 2023 7:42 am

And lower testosterone

Anonymous
Anonymous
May 27, 2023 7:41 am

I remodeled a house for a great guy, a doctor who liked his drink and cigars at the end of the day. He told me one day over a beer, avoid statins. He said he would never take one they’re bad for you.

Ouirphuqd
Ouirphuqd
May 27, 2023 7:49 am

One of my best friends died of liver cancer 3 years ago. He was a firm believer of health through pharmaceuticals. He was on Lipitor and was a true believer. I warned him of the side effects, but he thought the risks were worth it. The VA wanted to start me on Lipitor, I resisted because my HDL was 4 times normal, veritable Draino in my veins. Beware of the military industrial pharmaceutical complex!

clbrto
clbrto
May 27, 2023 10:56 am

I shun ALL pharmaceuticals and vaccines

since wuflu, I’ve shunned all doctors too – if they’re pushing that garbage, I’ll live longer without their “care”

Horst
Horst
May 27, 2023 11:08 am

Fun fact, it was Karl Lauterbach, who pushed the “cholesterol bad” meme back in the day. The same Karl was presented as an Corona expert at the beginning of the”pandemic”, got much screen time, no matter how often he was wrong or changed his opinions. Later he was even made German health minister, he still is. For decades, he is a known pharma lobbyist, and busy to drastically reduce the number of hospitals in Germany. Easy to spot in caricatures, always depicted with bad teeth, sometimes as Hitler.
PS: In the end, Virus and cholesterol are the same approach. Do some lab testing, declare findings as causal for a disease. Provide a cure, do the lobby and PR, collect $$$

Anon
Anon
May 27, 2023 12:02 pm

I am in a small minority of patients who took statins and am permanently damaged. I have mixed (type 1 & 4) hyperlipidemia and a family history of heart disease. My lipids profile was terrible, high LDL, low HDL and high triglycerides. My endocrinologist put me on Lipitor, and later Crestor for 7 years in total. I had horrible leg pain. The protocol then was to discontinue then restart. In late 2005 I discontinued Crestor but the pain never stopped. I was forced to take opioids to even function. I later went to the Mayo Clinic in 2007, then UCLA in 2010. They could not identify what went wrong. I’ve been on very strong opioids for debilitating chronic pain ever since. My working career ended over a decade early due to health, and because of how I was debilitated, I did not qualify for disability.

In 2019 I was being screened for a spinal stimulator implant (to help block pain signals to the brain) when near total blockage of two heart arteries was discovered and resolved via stints. I had successful implant surgery and it helped tremendously, but, I have been debilitated from Statins ever since 2005. My cardio doctor, seeing this statin problem, put me on Repatha instead of statins without issues.

A consulting doctor analyzed my case in 2016 and I took a genetic test that showed I have three genetic anomalies that make me unable to metabolize statins properly. This was unknown when I was taking statins and unavailable in 2005. The consulting doctor thought I was damaged at a genetic level, severely compromising my mitochondrial DNA. The UCLA neurologist speculated I had something like phantom limb pain, a permanent neuro injury from statins, which apparently only surfaced years after initial use.

I can’t sue the manufacturers because they funded over 300 studies showing how statins were harmless and effective. Dr Beatrice Golomb, UCSD published a FAERS study in 2008 & 2014 showing hundreds of thousands of severe side effects. Her seminal work has been ignored by the medical establishment.

Yes, the big pharma industry is corrupt and I’m in a small percentage of damaged patients. Sadly, most doctors have not a clue about this reality in 2023 and are quick to prescribe statins.

My suggestion? Take the $100 genetic test first and avoid statins if you have two or three anomalies like I did. Statins likely help a targeted group at low dosages, via inflamation reduction, but many, like me, are statin intolerant. If you are like me the damages are worse than the cardiac risks.

mark
mark
  Anon
May 27, 2023 8:18 pm

Anon,

Wow…what a harsh story…my best to you buddy.

Will pray for your supernatural healing.

Seriously.

JR
JR
May 27, 2023 12:16 pm

There was a study years ago I believe in the 70s. They injected mice with enough cholesterol to make the blood white. They suffered nothing from it until stress was introduced. I hope someone will be reminded and provide a link.

AKJOHN
AKJOHN
May 27, 2023 1:36 pm

Most if not all medical tests are a con. This includes blood pressure. I think much more harm is done by them than good. But, a really good Doctor can get information from them that may help you.

well_Inever
well_Inever
May 27, 2023 2:29 pm

I took a statin for about six months a couple years ago. Within a few weeks when I’d wake up in the morning I felt what I can only imagine it felt like if someone beat me with a baseball bat all night. I chalked it up to older age and my mattress. When I did laundry it got to the point that I could hardly lift the laundry basket full of clothes. It was like WTF? One day I was perusing YouTube and came across a video by DR. Berg about statins. I stopped taking them right then and there and all my symptoms went away. According to DR. Berg your body needs cholesterol and actually produces it. Your brain especially needs it. Anyway, when I go to the Dr’s. now they always try to get me to start taking it again. I think it’s a money thing for them. Never again.

mark
mark
  well_Inever
May 27, 2023 7:33 pm

Berg is good…I like many of his tubes…and then there is the Paul Harvey REST OF THE STORY….

(Just saying).

Anonymous
Anonymous
May 27, 2023 2:32 pm

Snake Oil on sale? Get your Snake Oil!! LOL.
Nothing really had change in over a few thousand years. Love reading and watching history repeat itself over and over again, and again.

mark
mark
  Anonymous
May 27, 2023 7:34 pm

Hmmm…Another analyst of time!

mark
mark
May 27, 2023 2:40 pm

This thread is reinforcing…thanks for putting it up! The VA started relentlessly pressuring me to take both a BP and cholesterol prescription in 2015 (I was 65) and has never relented visit after visit, physical after physical, and I have never agreed.

My BP has never been low, even when I was young…it stays (on average) in the 130 – 140/75 range but will come in lower in the 120’s and higher…but whenever I get on a schedule at home and record it – it always comes down to more than an acceptable level for a 73 year old. I don’t obsess over it.

My cholesterol has been almost perfect my entire life…but that has not stopped them from pushing statins on me year after year…when I challenge them on why I would take a pill when my numbers are perfect they say: “To lower my aging RISK”!

I call bullshit on the Pharmacia pushers…and that rationalization!

At my last visit once again I had to turn down the Death Jab, the Flu Jab, the Shingles Jab…and one other one I can’t even remember what it was. They will make you a KBI if you let them (Killed By Injection).

Now, here is a trick I think they use to try and get me to agree to a BP medicine. Just before they take my BP they draw blood for my physical. After having a needle in my arm my BP is almost always high. Then that high reading becomes the reason the doctor wants you to start taking a BP medicine. But I am ready for that trick.

After the doctor makes the sales pitch over the reading I pull out BP readings I took at home for a few days at the same time (before my coffee) and the readings average 20 points lower before I was jabbed by the white coat right for the blood draw…just before the BP reading.

Reminds me of my last car purchase pulling out the real value of the car after I got the salesman down as low as he will go before I bring out documented reality…and what I will agree to.

I don’t think there is any difference from used car salesmen and too many doctors.

AKJOHN
AKJOHN
  mark
May 27, 2023 2:51 pm

I had about the same thing with Blood pressure as you. It’s normally a bit high, and I tracked it. One day it’s high the next fine. I came to the conclusion it means nothing as I feel great everyday. Once I tell the Doctor I can walk 30 miles in a day. They say. I guess you don’t need it. Most Doctors are just paid drug pushers.

well_Inever
well_Inever
  AKJOHN
May 27, 2023 5:11 pm

I was in my early 40’s and was placed on BP medication. After the prescription ran out I never went back to the Dr’s. to get it refilled. Some time later I went to an ophthalmologist to get my eye’s checked out. He asked me if I was on BP medication. I said I was but not now. He took detailed microscopic (sorta) pictures of my eyes. There were many burst blood vessels in my eyes that the naked eye cant see. That’s what high BP does. Also in your kidneys which will eventually cause kidney failure. Of course the major cause of stokes is high BP too. I’ve been on BP medication ever since.

mark
mark
  well_Inever
May 27, 2023 7:06 pm

well_Inever,

More than one way to skin a cat (Sorry James).

Every eye exam I have had the last decade has come out perfectly healthy. At 73 I still have 20-20 ‘distance’ vision.

I have one scar they picked upped years ago sending me to the next level. I’m assuming that was the micro scoping level, pretty sophisticated. Anyway, they confirmed it and asked me if I had ever had an exceptional sharp blow to my face…I started laughing…having had five black eyes (once two at a time) and serious concussion/shrapnel from a B-40 RPG.

I digress…but below is not as easy as popping pills…but I don’t pop pills…to date. There are good ones…I’m just holding out being old…stubborn and pill suspicious.

comment image

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“If you have high blood pressure, you’re not alone: nearly a third of adult Americans have been diagnosed with hypertension, and another quarter are well on their way. Yet a whopping 56 percent of diagnosed patients do not have it under control. The good news? Hypertension is easily treatable (and preventable), and you can take action today to bring your blood pressure down in just four weeks – without the potential dangers and side effects of prescription medications. In Blood Pressure Down, Janet Bond Brill distills what she’s learned over decades of helping her patients lower their blood pressure into a 10-step lifestyle plan that’s manageable for anyone. You’ll harness the power of blood pressure power foods, start a simple regimen of exercise and stress reduction, and stay on track with checklists, meal plans, and more than 50 simple recipes. Easy, effective, safe – and delicious – Blood Pressure Down is the encouraging resource that empowers you, or your loved ones, to lower your blood pressure and live a longer, heart-healthy life”.

well_Inever
well_Inever
  mark
May 28, 2023 4:35 am

Thank you. Yes, I was aware that’s it’s possible to lower BP naturally. BP medication like many if not all other medications only treats the symptoms, not the cause. If they treated the cause you would not be a returning customer. Unfortunately, when you have a jackass for a boss, etc. Oh, if you only knew. Anyway, I didn’t want to make my previous post so long and am trying to control it naturally. Still take my medications for now though.
Have a good one.