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By
Sally Fallon and Mary G. Enig, PhD
Originally
printed at Weston
A. Price
Hypercholesterolemia is the health issue of the 21st century. It
is actually an invented disease, a "problem" that emerged
when health professionals learned how to measure cholesterol levels
in the blood. High cholesterol exhibits no outward signs--unlike
other conditions of the blood, such as diabetes or anemia, diseases
that manifest telltale symptoms like thirst or weakness--hypercholesterolemia
requires the services of a physician to detect its presence. Many
people who feel perfectly healthy suffer from high cholesterol--in
fact, feeling good is actually a symptom of high cholesterol!
Doctors who treat this new disease must first convince their patients
that they are sick and need to take one or more expensive drugs
for the rest of their lives, drugs that require regular checkups
and blood tests. But such doctors do not work in a vacuum--their
efforts to convert healthy people into patients are bolstered by
the full weight of the U.S. government, the media and the medical
establishment, agencies that have worked in concert to disseminate
the cholesterol dogma and convince the population that high cholesterol
is the forerunner of heart disease and possibly other diseases as
well.
Who suffers from hypercholesterolemia? Peruse the medical literature
of 25 or 30 years ago and you'll get the following answer: any middle-aged
man whose cholesterol is over 240 with other risk factors, such
as smoking or overweight.
After the Cholesterol Consensus Conference in 1984, the parameters
changed; anyone (male or female) with cholesterol over 200 could
receive the dreaded diagnosis and a prescription for pills. Recently
that number has been moved down to 180. If you have had a heart
attack, you get to take cholesterol-lowering medicines even if your
cholesterol is already very low--after all, you have committed the
sin of having a heart attack so your cholesterol must therefore
be too high. The penance is a lifetime of cholesterol-lowering medications
along with a boring low-fat diet. But why wait until you have a
heart attack? Since we all labor under the stigma of original sin,
we are all candidates for treatment. Current edicts stipulate cholesterol
testing and treatment for young adults and even children.
The drugs that doctors use to treat the new disease are called
statins--sold under a variety of names including:
- Lipitor (atorvastatin)
- Zocor (simvastatin)
- Mevacor (lovastatin)
- Pravachol (pravastatin)
How Statins Work
This
diagram illustrates the pathways involved in cholesterol production.
The process begins with acetyl-CoA, a two-carbon molecule sometimes
referred to as the "building block of life." Three acetyl-CoA
molecules combine to form six-carbon hydroxymethyl glutaric acid
(HMG). The step from HMG to mevalonate requires an enzyme, HMG-CoA
reductase. Statin drugs work by inhibiting this enzyme--hence the
formal name of HMG-CoA reductase inhibitors. Herein lies the potential
for numerous side effects, because statin drugs inhibit not just
the production of cholesterol, but a whole family of intermediary
substances, many if not all of which have important biochemical
functions in their own right.
Consider the findings of pediatricians at the University of California,
San Diego who published a description of a child with a hereditary
defect of mevalonic kinase, the enzyme that facilitates the next
step beyond HMG-CoA reductase.1 The child was mentally
retarded, microcephalic (very small head), small for his age, profoundly
anemic, acidotic and febrile. He also had cataracts. Predictably,
his cholesterol was consistently low--70-79 mg/dl. He died at the
age of 24 months. The child represents an extreme example of cholesterol
inhibition, but his case illuminates the possible consequences of
taking statins in strong doses or for a lengthy period of time:
- Depression of mental acuity
- Anemia
- Acidosis
- Frequent fevers
- Cataracts
Cholesterol is one of three end products in the mevalonate chain.
The two others are ubiquinone and dilochol. Ubiquinone or Co-Enzyme
Q10 is a critical cellular nutrient biosynthesized in the mitochondria.
It plays a role in ATP production in the cells and functions as
an electron carrier to cytochrome oxidase, our main respiratory
enzyme. The heart requires high levels of Co-Q10. A form of Co-Q10
called ubiquinone is found in all cell membranes where it plays
a role in maintaining membrane integrity so critical to nerve conduction
and muscle integrity. Co-Q10 is also vital to the formation of elastin
and collagen. Side effects of Co-Q10 deficiency include muscle wasting
leading to weakness and severe back pain, heart failure (the heart
is a muscle!), neuropathy and inflammation of the tendons and ligaments,
often leading to rupture.
Dolichols also play a role of immense importance. In the cells
they direct various proteins manufactured in response to DNA directives
to their proper targets, ensuring that the cells respond correctly
to genetically programmed instruction. Thus statin drugs can lead
to unpredictable chaos on the cellular level, much like a computer
virus that wipes out certain pathways or files.
Squalene, the immediate precursor to cholesterol, has anti-cancer
effects, according to research.
The fact that some studies have shown that statins can prevent
heart disease, at least in the short term, is most likely explained
not by the inhibition of cholesterol production but because they
block the creation of mevalonate. Reduced amounts of mevalonate
seem to make smooth muscle cells less active, and platelets less
able to produce thromboxane. Atherosclerosis begins with the growth
of smooth muscle cells in side artery walls and thromboxane is necessary
for blood clotting.
Cholesterol
Of course, statins inhibit the production of cholesterol--they
do this very well. Nowhere is the failing of our medical system
more evident than in the wholesale acceptance of cholesterol reduction
as a way to prevent disease--have all these doctors forgotten what
they learned in biochemistry 101 about the many roles of cholesterol
in the human biochemistry?
Every cell membrane in our body contains cholesterol because cholesterol
is what makes our cells waterproof--without cholesterol we could
not have a different biochemistry on the inside and the outside
of the cell. When cholesterol levels are not adequate, the cell
membrane becomes leaky or porous, a situation the body interprets
as an emergency, releasing a flood of corticoid hormones that work
by sequestering cholesterol from one part of the body and transporting
it to areas where it is lacking. Cholesterol is the body's repair
substance: scar tissue contains high levels of cholesterol, including
scar tissue in the arteries.
Cholesterol is the precursor to vitamin D, necessary for numerous
biochemical processes including mineral metabolism. The bile salts,
required for the digestion of fat, are made of cholesterol. Those
who suffer from low cholesterol often have trouble digesting fats.
Cholesterol also functions as a powerful antioxidant, thus protecting
us against cancer and aging.
Cholesterol is vital to proper neurological function. It plays
a key role in the formation of memory and the uptake of hormones
in the brain, including serotonin, the body's feel-good chemical.
When cholesterol levels drop too low, the serotonin receptors cannot
work. Cholesterol is the main organic molecule in the brain, constituting
over half the dry weight of the cerebral cortex.
Finally, cholesterol is the precursor to all the hormones produced
in the adrenal cortex including glucocorticoids, which regulate
blood sugar levels, and mineralocorticoids, which regulate mineral
balance. Corticoids are the cholesterol-based adrenal hormones that
the body uses in response to stress of various types; it promotes
healing and balances the tendency to inflammation. The adrenal cortex
also produces sex hormones, including testosterone, estrogen and
progesterone, out of cholesterol. Thus, low cholesterol--whether
due to an innate error of metabolism or induced by cholesterol-lowering
diets and drugs--can be expected to disrupt the production of adrenal
hormones and lead to:
- Blood sugar problems
- Edema
- Mineral deficiencies
- Chronic inflammation
- Difficulty in healing
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- Allergies
- Asthma
- Reduced libido
- Infertility
- Various reproductive problems
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Enter the Statins
Statin drugs entered the market with great promise. They replaced
a class of pharmaceuticals that lowered cholesterol by preventing
its absorption from the gut. These drugs often had immediate and
unpleasant side effects, including nausea, indigestion and constipation,
and in the typical patient they lowered cholesterol levels only
slightly. Patient compliance was low: the benefit did not seem worth
the side effects and the potential for use very limited. By contrast,
statin drugs had no immediate side effects: they did not cause nausea
or indigestion and they were consistently effective, often lowering
cholesterol levels by 50 points or more.
During the last 20 years, the industry has mounted an incredible
promotional campaign--enlisting scientists, advertising agencies,
the media and the medical profession in a blitz that turned the
statins into one of the bestselling pharmaceuticals of all time.
Sixteen million Americans now take Lipitor, the most popular statin,
and drug company officials claim that 36 million Americans are candidates
for statin drug therapy.
What bedevils the industry is growing reports of side effects that
manifest many months after the commencement of therapy; the November
2003 issue of Smart Money magazine reports on a 1999 study at St.
Thomas' Hospital in London (apparently unpublished), which found
that 36 percent of patients on Lipitor's highest dose reported side
effects; even at the lowest dose, 10 percent reported side effects.2
Muscle Pain and Weakness
The most common side effect is muscle pain and weakness, a condition
called rhabdomyolysis, most likely due to the depletion of Co-Q10,
a nutrient that supports muscle function. Dr. Beatrice Golomb of
San Diego, California is currently conducting a series of studies
on statin side effects. The industry insists that only 2-3 percent
of patients get muscle aches and cramps but in one study, Golomb
found that 98 percent of patients taking Lipitor and one-third of
the patients taking Mevachor (a lower-dose statin) suffered from
muscle problems.3 A message board devoted to Lipitor
at forum.ditonline.com
contains more than 800 posts, many detailing severe side effects.
The Lipitor board at www.rxlist.com
contains more than 2,600 posts.
The test for muscle wasting or rhabdomyolysis is elevated levels
of a chemical called creatine kinase (CK). But many people experience
pain and fatigue even though they have normal CK levels.4
Tahoe City resident Doug Peterson developed slurred speech, balance
problems and severe fatigue after three years on Lipitor--for two
and a half years, he had no side effects at all.5 It
began with restless sleep patterns--twitching and flailing his arms.
Loss of balance followed and the beginning of what Doug calls the
"statin shuffle"--a slow, wobbly walk across the room.
Fine motor skills suffered next. It took him five minutes to write
four words, much of which was illegible. Cognitive function also
declined. It was hard to convince his doctors that Lipitor could
be the culprit, but when he finally stopped taking it, his coordination
and memory improved.
John Altrocchi took Mevacor for three years without side effects;
then he developed calf pain so severe he could hardly walk. He also
experienced episodes of temporary memory loss.
For some, however, muscle problems show up shortly after treatment
begins. Ed Ontiveros began having muscle problems within 30 days
of taking Lipitor. He fell in the bathroom and had trouble getting
up. The weakness subsided when he went off Lipitor. In another case,
reported in the medical journal Heart, a patient developed rhabdomyolysis
after a single dose of a statin.6 Heel pain from plantar
fascitis (heel spurs) is another common complaint among those taking
statin drugs. One correspondent reported the onset of pain in the
feet shortly after beginning statin treatment. She had visited an
evangelist, requesting that he pray for her sore feet. He enquired
whether she was taking Lipitor. When she said yes, he told her that
his feet had also hurt when he took Lipitor.7
Active people are much more likely to develop problems from statin
use than those who are sedentary. In a study carried out in Austria,
only six out of 22 athletes with familial hypercholesterolemia were
able to endure statin treatment.8 The others discontinued
treatment because of muscle pain.
By the way, other cholesterol-lowering agents besides statin drugs
can cause joint pain and muscle weakness. A report in Southern Medical
Journal described muscle pains and weakness in a man who took Chinese
red rice, an herbal preparation that lowers cholesterol.9
Anyone suffering from myopathy, fibromyalgia, coordination problems
and fatigue needs to look at low cholesterol plus Co-Q10 deficiency
as a possible cause.
Stay tuned for Part II
in the next issue of the newsletter.
References
Related Articles:
The Truth About Cholesterol-Lowering
Drugs (Statins), Cholesterol, and Health
Crestor and Other Statins:
Are They Really Worth the Risk?
Half of Population Will be
Taking Statins
Statins - Is the Danger is
the Dose?
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