This is extremely important news. Statins are often poorly tolerated and there comes a time when the patient really needs to reduce their dosage. I personally have observed this although i have used them for a decade. Other recent information informs us that Coenzyme will ameliorate this problem. Thus we do have options.
The real argument here is that a five year program of Statins will work to seriously lower the risk thereafter. That is sufficient to make it a key tool in any persons anti heart attack regimen. Lowering the risk matters.
Statins are continuing to find additional uses and will likely turn out to be used in everyone's toolkit.
Use of cholesterol drug in middle age lowers heart risks for decades later, study finds
By Marilynn Marchione
https://ca.news.yahoo.com/cholesterol-drug-middle-age-lowers-heart-risks-decades-195025196.html
CHICAGO
- Taking a cholesterol-lowering drug for five years in middle age can
lower heart and death risks for decades afterward, and the benefits seem
to grow over time, a landmark study finds. Doctors say it's the first
evidence that early use of a statin can have a legacy effect, perhaps
changing someone's odds of disease for good.
"It might be a lifetime effect," said one study leader, Dr. Chris Packard of the University of Glasgow in Scotland.
Not
only did original benefits of statins continue into late life, but
researchers were surprised to see new ones become evident over time, he
said.
The results are from the West of Scotland Coronary
Prevention Trial, the first study ever to show that statins could
prevent heart problems in people who had not yet developed clogged
arteries but had high LDL, the bad type of cholesterol.
The
watershed trial led to these drugs — sold as Lipitor, Crestor, Zocor and
now in generic form — becoming a mainstay of treatment and one of the
most prescribed medicines around the world.
The long-term results were discussed at an American Heart Association conference that ends Wednesday in Chicago.
The
study, which started in 1989, involved about 6,600 Scottish men, ages
45 to 64, with high LDL — around 190, on average. Half were given the
statin Pravachol and the rest, dummy pills. Five years later, there were
35 per cent fewer heart-related deaths and also fewer heart attacks in
the statin group.
Once the study ended, the men went back to their
regular doctors, and about one-third of both groups kept or started
taking a statin. This means any differences seen years later probably is
due to whether they took statins during the five-year study, Packard
explained.
Scotland has national health care and good electronic
medical records, so researchers were able to document what happened to
more than 90 per cent of the men.
Twenty year after the study
began, the risk of heart-related deaths was 27 per cent lower among the
men who took Pravachol for those first five years rather than dummy
pills.
The chance of dying from any cause was 13 per cent lower in the statin group at the 20-year mark, a benefit not seen earlier on.
"The
big surprise" was a 31 per cent lower risk of heart failure in the
group initially assigned to take the statin, Packard said. Heart failure
occurs when a heart damaged from a heart attack or other cause
gradually weakens over time and can't pump blood effectively.
Doctors
have long suspected that the way statins work gives benefits beyond
lowering cholesterol, and the heart failure result supports that theory,
Packard said.
"This is another stone in the foundation supporting
the value of preventive cardiology," said Dr. Sidney C. Smith Jr., a
former Heart Association president from the University of North Carolina
at Chapel Hill. Other factors might have played some role in how these
men fared, but "nevertheless, a moderate-dose statin taken for primary
prevention shows long-term benefit."
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