All men followed in a recent study decreased
in their time spent exercising, but those men who began taking statins during
the study decreased their time devoted to exercise faster than the others.
by John
Tyburski
Copyright © Daily
Digest News, KPR Media, LLC. All rights reserved.
Statins are
wonderful drugs for decreasing levels of low-density lipoprotein, or “bad”
cholesterol, and thus reducing the risk of atherosclerosis and heart disease.
However, although usually mild, statins do have side effects, and new research
shows that some of them may prompt some men just starting out on statins to
exercise less. The new report appears
this week in the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA)
Internal Medicine.
A team of
researchers in Portland, Oregon determined that the statin users they studied
exercised approximately 40 minutes less each week than those who were not
taking any statin drugs, including Lipitor, Zocor, Crestor, Lescol, Pravachol,
and Vytorin. The results confirm previous observations by others, although the
authors of the report stress that statin use should not be discontinued. The
side effects of statin drugs sometimes include muscle ache, weakness, and
fatigue.
“Statins are
extremely helpful for people who need them,” stressed study lead author David
Lee, an assistant professor in the Department of Pharmacy Practice at Oregon
State University/Oregon Health and Science University’s College of Pharmacy in
Portland. “They’ve really changed the landscape of cardiovascular health over
the last 20 years.”
“But the
thing I want people to be aware of is that they can have some adverse effects
on muscles that might lead to a decrease in exercise,” Lee continued. “Because
by being aware of that problem perhaps we can encourage patients to actually
make an effort to push themselves to maintain their exercise habits. Because
exercise is really very important, both for maintaining general health and for
maintaining the ability to carry on independently as we age.”
This was a
large study involving 3,000 male subjects of ages 65 years and older with an
average age of 73. All men in the study were followed from 2000 to
2002, lived independently, and could walk without assistance during this
period. About 25 percent of the men were already taking statins at the time of
enrollment, and about another 25 percent began using statins during the study
period, leaving about 1,500 men not taking statins at any time during the
study.
All of the
men reported their exercise habits and wore activity monitors for one-week
periods near the end of the study. Activity levels for all men declined
slightly over the study period, but men who began statin use during the study
exhibited faster rates of activity decline compared with the men who did not
take statins.
“Now, we
didn’t look at the underlying cause or reason for decreased exercise,” Lee
acknowledged. “But the main hypothesis is that people who take a statin do
experience an increase in muscle pain. It’s actually the most common side
effect. And observational studies have shown that as many as 20 percent of
people taking statins will have muscle pain.”
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