Update on statins

It does in mice:

I'm sure this doesn't need to be said but, we are not mice. The dose they give mice compared to their body weight is usually ridiculous. That's why I ignore any studies done on mice good or bad. I wait for the human trials to make any decision on taking or not taking a drug. but that's just me. Unless it some X-Men type of gene manipulation therapy, then I'm all in. lol
 
First of all these are some fascinating results - thank you for posting. It seems like you may fall into the "lean mass hyper responder" category, which is not supposed to be associated with the same negative CVD outcomes that would accompany cholesterol that was similarly high due to different causes.

Not with those trigs.
 
i would but i have 20mg tabs, so I was planning 10mg EOD

Makes sense and is probably fine if you tolerate rosuvastatin at all. When you exhaust your supply, maybe plan for a smaller dose if you're getting the LDL reduction you're looking for.

The lower the peak serum concentration, the less likelihood of side effects. It is a deviation from the standard of care, but my general recommendation for lipid management is to keep statin doses low and pair it with ezetimibe and bempedoic acid to achieve the desired LDL lowering effect.

Statins are great, but as an unfortunate byproduct of the approval process, the dosing guidelines are egregiously high. By that I mean, the clinical trials were focused on very high risk populations that would be most likely to show positive outcomes in which anything but the maximal dose would be unethical.

I feel comfortable with this guidance because the ACC is fucking out to lunch. They define the standard of care for such things and are *still* pushing statin mono-therapy.

In their view, "preventative" intervention should start once the 10 year MESA risk exceeds 10% which blows my fucking mind. To be clear, when there's a MACE (major adverse cardiac event), the most likely presentation of that is fucking death, for which there's 50% probability. So, if we do the math, they consider *beginning* preventative intervention when there's a 10% chance of a MACE in the next 10 years and if you hit that, a 50/50 chance of dying, with the final calculated risk of death at 5%.

So, roll a d20.
 
thoughts on rosuvastatin taken only 2-3x per week?

Many guys have good outcome with this protocol. I'm currently taking 5mg ezetimibe every day and 2,5mg rosuvostatin twice a week. Haven't done bloods yet because i'm leaving it for the end of my cycle, but there are cases who've seen improvement with just 5mg a week.
 
I'd really like to just get on Repetha, however getting that approved by the insurance is a bit more difficult because of the price.
 
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