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Keep taking the statins
By
Jan 26, 2007, 14:10
Dr Thomas Stuttaford responds in
todays edition of The Times (26-01-07) to the recent article in the
Daily Mail regarding cholesterol and statins.
Keep taking the statins
Publication: Times 2
Date: 26 January 2007
DR THOMAS STUTTAFORD
If people at risk of strokes and heart attacks throw away their statins, many will die
As this is the season for strokes and heart attacks, as well as frosty
mornings, all those who know they are at risk should consider, then
reject, the opinions expressed recently by Dr Malcolm Kendrick on
statins.
If extracts from his book fairly reflect his beliefs, then he seeks to
persuade people to abandon statins and have a high-fat diet. If
followed, this advice could cause a public health disaster to make the
damage done by the MMR vaccinations debate seem as nothing. Dr
Kendrick’s book apparently rebuts internationally accepted teaching —
and the sheaves of scientific papers to support it — that statins have
revolutionised the life expectancy of people in danger of a coronary
thrombosis or an ischaemic stroke. The latter, the most common form of
stroke, is caused by a clot in a cerebral blood vessel.
Dr Kendrick apparently denies a relevant relationship between high
levels of low-density lipoprotein cholesterol and triglycerides — two
of the fats circulating in the blood — and heart attacks and strokes.
He suggests that doctors should tell patients that fighting cholesterol
with statins is bunk.
He extends his case by suggesting that doctors should recommend a
high-fat diet, including as much saturated animal fats as desired, for
it doesn’t matter a damn. The book is reported as suggesting that the
protection statins offer is so small as to be insignificant, and anyway
applies only to men.
In fact women with atherosclerotic heart disease are undertreated. Too
often early symptoms of heart disease, less obvious in women, are
either ignored or misinterpreted. Currently women also respond less
well to treatment, but this is improving. One problem has been the
patronising belief that all older women put on weight and, in
consequence, have raised cholesterol and blood pressure. As this is a
gender effect, the argument runs, women need neither statins nor
intensive treatment for blood pressure.
Yet post-menopausal women’s risk of death from cardiovascular disease
is as great, if not greater, than men’s. Furthermore, scans of arteries
of patients before and after treatment with statins demonstrate both
the increase in diameter of previously furred-up arteries, and reduced
cholesterol levels. The level of high-density, cardioprotective “good”
cholesterol increases, while levels of the damaging forms — low-density
cholesterol and triglycerides — fall. Recent work at the DeBakey Heart
Centre in Houston, Texas, suggests that statins also reduce harmful
inflammation in the arteries that may precipitate rupture of a fatty
arterial plaque and cause a coronary thrombosis.
When the Medical Research Council in Oxford and the University of
Sydney reviewed the case histories of 90,000 patients who had been
treated with statins, they concluded that the risk of a heart attack or
ischaemic stroke was reduced by about a third. The benefits started
immediately and increased the longer statins were taken and the farther
cholesterol levels fell. The survey also revealed that although statins
are especially valuable to those at high risk of a heart attack or
stroke, they are also cardioprotective for people whose cholesterol
levels would previously have been considered normal.
The National Institute for Health and Clinical Excellence (NICE), not
noted for expressing hasty or extravagant views, supports the greater
use of statins. We, doctors and patients, should follow its advice and
ignore that of Dr Kendrick.
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