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 am pretty good with my eating. No overweightnor underweight. Walk min 7,000 steps a day (approx three miles), today I did 7 miles. Do yard work and house work. Working on sleeping better through sleep meditations and I take Beta Sitosterol supplements which seem to be lowering my LPa. My cholesterol is still high, but my good cholesterol is, too so my ratio is good (2.5). Has to fire my cardiologist because he could not stop beating the statin/Repatha drugs drum even though they made me very sick.
I am looking forward to hearing back to learn how you do it. Question, since the standard lipid panel is pretty general and there is so much more knowledge available today….what specific markers do your doctors want you to manage? What risk are you trying to minimize?
Thank you!! Not so long ago I heard about LPa for the first time from a doctor that said he was more concerned about my LPa than my other numbers. (I understand statins don’t lower LPa anyway). It was only about 6 months ago I heard about “ratios.” My cardiologist was completely stuck on my “bad” cholesterol numbers and nothing else and dismissed me when I couldn’t take statins or Repatha. My internist looked at my ratio, which is very good, and said he’s not worried about me. I lowered my LPa by 60 points with an OTC without side effects. Figure your ratio this way:
Divide your total cholesterol level by your HDL cholesterol level.
For example, if your total cholesterol is 200 mg/dL and your HDL is 50 mg/dL, the ratio would be 200 / 50 = 4:1.
3. Interpret the ratio:
A lower ratio is generally considered healthier. A ratio of 3.5 or lower is considered very good, while a ratio below 5 is normal.
A higher ratio, such as 7:1, indicates a higher risk of heart disease.
HomeAgainLA ( @llynch17056 )
Wow, I do know about LP(a) but I didn’t know you could lower it on your own. Great job! It’s genetic, right?
My cholesterol is pesky high, genetic so it always has been. My understanding of that is the typical risk calculators don’t really apply because they assume you have acquired (accumulated) high numbers. I know mine has been high forever so my life-time accumulated impact is much higher than someone else my age with my numbers who has acquired theirs.
Mine is inherited, too. My dad and grandfather died of heart attacks. My cholesterol has always been on the high side. But, my good cholesterol has always been high as well (life style?). It was my internist that gave credibility to my ratio.
I am interested to hear what @dcody reports about experience with reducing risk by lifestyle.
What was the OTC that lowered your Lp(a)?
Beta-Sitosterol
What reports that Repatha has negative effects? I’ve been on it for a couple months with no issues.
All studies indicate that the only way to lower Lp(a) is to lower LDL as Lp(a) attaches to LDL in the liver. Lower LDL=less Lpa(a) getting into the arteries.
Other health issues should be managed best as possible, especially if you have thyroid disease as those levels affect Lp(a) levels. Any infection, flu, menopause etc can also affect Lp(a) fluctuations. If in very good health your Lp(a) will be at lowest level possible if not taking Ezidemibe and/or Repatha.