City
Epaper

Statins may cause muscle weakness: Report

By IANS | Updated: October 9, 2023 18:35 IST

New York, Oct 9 Statins, commonly used to lower cholesterol levels, may cause a rare long-term condition which ...

Open in App

New York, Oct 9 Statins, commonly used to lower cholesterol levels, may cause a rare long-term condition which causes muscle weakness, according to a report by the UK's Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA).

Statins -- atorvastatin, pravastatin, lovastatin, fluvastatin, simvastatin, rosuvastatin and pitavastatin (single-ingredient and fixed-dose combination products) -- are important medicines to lower a person’s risk of having cardiovascular events such as angina, heart attacks, and stroke.

The medications are an acceptably safe and effective group that help lower the level of low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol in the blood.

Statins also play an important role in the treatment of atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease (narrowing and hardening of arteries).

But, "there have been some suspected reports of new-onset or aggravation of pre-existing myasthenia gravis or ocular myasthenia associated with statin use", the MHRA said.

Myasthenia gravis is an autoimmune neuromuscular disorder that is characterised by fluctuating weakness of the voluntary muscles that control eye movements, facial expression, speaking, swallowing, limb movement and breathing.

The common symptoms of myasthenic gravis include drooping eyelids, double vision, problems with chewing or swallowing, speech disturbance, limb weakness and shortness of breath.

Many people who take statins do not experience side effects and, where this does happen, these are typically mild. But those experiencing problems should not stop statin treatment without first discussing this with the doctor, the MHRA said.

The health agency said that the majority of UK patients recovered after stopping statin treatment, while a minority continued to experience symptoms; recurrence of symptoms has been reported when patients restarted on the same or a different statin.

MHRA urged patients taking the pills to "be alert to new symptoms for myasthenia gravis, or worsening symptoms of pre-existing myasthenia gravis, and to seek medical advice if these occur". Globally, there has been a very small number of reports of new-onset or aggravation of preexisting myasthenia gravis.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

NationalNo matter how much K'taka CM, Cong beat their drums, they won't win bypolls: BJP

CricketPathan hails "extra firepower" brought by SRH debutants Praful, Sakib against RR

BusinessHow AI Is Helping Students Navigate Careers, Universities, and What Comes Next

PoliticsHopeful that Samrat Choudhary will carry forward works of Nitish Kumar: BJP MP Jaiswal

Other SportsIPL 2026: When and where to watch LSG vs RCB match

International Realted Stories

InternationalOver 80 pc of Balochistan lacks primary healthcare: Report

InternationalTurkey: 16 injured after former student opens fire in school

InternationalAmbedkar Jayanti commemorated at Indian Embassy in Azerbaijan with community tribute

InternationalMacron mediates as Pezeshkian signals readiness for US talks amid naval standoff in Hormuz

InternationalPakistan: Denied justice since 2014, family of slain journalist seeks fresh probe