Started Repatha - Side Effects
I had terrible side effects with statins (any statin, any dosage). For about 30 years my doctors have pushed statins and
I have resisted. Finally I agreed to Repatha. The first week I had zero side effects. With my second dose, 2 weeks in, i woke up and my joints and muscles hurt a LOT.
1. Does this side effect go away?
2. What do you know about the recent information that the Repatha trials underreporting deaths from cardiac events while taking Repatha.
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I don't know your age, but I am wondering if some of these muscle aches and weaknesses are age related, but the statins and perhaps other drugs make these issues much, much worse. I am 66 1/2 - started statin at 64 and suffered increasing pain and weakness and cramps that progressed over 2 years. I eventually got 90% better when I stopped. Everyone noticed my decline is so many areas of my life in my statin years - couldn't do yoga, pick up grandkids, walk up stairs or get out of bed or the car without terrible pain. These are not little things. Quality of life issues big time.
No one can tell you the answer. My experience was that every statin, every dose caused intolerable pain. So, if you had pain on one you probably had pain on the other. And, sadly, will probably have pain on Repatha. The pain takes longer to show up on Repatha, for me, about 2 months. I thought I had finally found one I could take, but, when the pain came, it can hard. Just my experience. I wish you well. Unfortunately, doctors just want you to take it no matter what pain you are in. A lot of people take statins without a problem which makes it hard on those that have bad side effects. The doctors tend not to believe us, which is ridiculous. I’m not a whiny toddler, I am a 77 year old smart woman that wishes she could take them, it would be so easy if I could. Instead I have spent a decade having terrible life disrupting side effects as doctors keep trying different brands and different doses after which I spend months each time nursing myself back to health. I finally said “I quit” to which my doctor said “then I can’t help you.” A stunning statement to hear from your heart doctor. Actually, if he really cared, he would work with me on other things that might help and, at least, be sympathetic. On my own I got a base line Lipid Panel and started taking Beta-Sitosterol PlantSterols which are supposed to to lower my LP(a). So far no side effects. I will do another Lipid Panel in 6 months. I have to do something.
I experienced the same. One doctor finally said “some people just can’t take them.” That was the first time any doctor implied I wasn’t falling in 10 years of this ordeal. I am 77. When I’m not on statins or Repatha I walk 10,000 steps a day, do all my house and yard work, practice yoga. On statins I am practically bedridden and every step hurts.
*wasn”t faking, not “falling”
I hear you. It is a hard road for sure. We are not being non compliant. We just want a good quality of life.
Truly. One doctor threatened to put “noncompliant” in my medical chart!!!
My cardiologist actually told me my PCP said he was concerned I would be non compliant with statin therapy because I didn’t like how it made me feel. PCP was the one who initially called in a statin based on my annual blood test without even discussing it with me. So yes, I refused to take it until I consulted with a cardiologist. Multiple tests later - I passed every single one with a calcium score of 0 - the cardiologist told me I still needed my numbers lower. So frustrating!
I heard on a doctor podcast that it's the Apo B that's the killer. "Apo B" is considered the "killer LDL" because it represents the protein component of all atherogenic lipoprotein particles, including LDL, and is a more accurate indicator of cardiovascular risk compared to just measuring LDL cholesterol levels alone; essentially, a higher Apo B level indicates a higher number of potentially harmful LDL particles circulating in the blood, making it a better marker for atherosclerosis development.
Key points about Apo B:
What it is:
Apolipoprotein B (Apo B) is a protein found on the surface of all atherogenic lipoproteins, including LDL, VLDL, and IDL.
Why it's important:
Since each lipoprotein particle carries only one Apo B molecule, measuring the level of Apo B gives a more accurate picture of the total number of potentially harmful particles in the bloodstream, even if the LDL cholesterol level appears normal.
Clinical implications:
High levels of Apo B are strongly associated with an increased risk of cardiovascular disease, even when LDL cholesterol levels are seemingly within normal range.
https://www.jacc.org/doi/10.1016/j.jacc.2020.11.079#:~:text=Although%20controversy%20around%20the%20causal,cholesterol%20(3%2C4).
I am taking the path him because I had an unbearable intolerance to statins. I am on my eighth month twice a month injections, and it is so benign once in a blue moon, I may experience a little backache, especially in the first two months, but I just take a Doan’s pills and it goes away in 15 minutes and I am good to go. I also take Zetia every other day.
Thank you. That was very informative.