What cholesterol patients need to know
By AMERICAN COLLEGE OF CARDIOLOGY
A recent study found that statin therapy does not exacerbate muscle injury, pain, or fatigue during moderate-intensity exercise, allowing statin users to safely maintain an active lifestyle and benefit from cardiovascular health improvements.
A study published in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology found that statin therapy does not worsen muscle injury, pain, or fatigue in individuals participating in moderate-intensity exercise, such as walking. Researchers compared the effects of moderate exercise on muscle injury in symptomatic and asymptomatic statin users and non-statin using controls, and found no significant differences between the groups. The study concluded that prolonged moderate-intensity exercise is safe for statin users, allowing them to maintain an active lifestyle and reap the cardiovascular health benefits. No correlation was found between leukocyte CoQ10 levels and muscle injury markers or muscle pain scores.
Statin therapy does not exacerbate muscle injury, pain, or fatigue in people engaging in moderate-intensity exercise, such as walking, according to a study published on April 3 in the Journal of the American College of Cardiology. The findings are reassuring for people who experience muscle pain or fatigue from statins but need to engage in physical activity to keep their cholesterol levels low and their hearts healthy.
Statins have long been the gold standard for lowering LDL or “bad” cholesterol and preventing cardiovascular disease (CVD) events, but while generally well-tolerated, they can cause muscle pain and weakness in some.
Physical activity is also a cornerstone of CVD prevention,
especially when combined with statins; however, studies have shown vigorous
exercise can increase muscle damage in some statin users, which can lead to
decreased physical activity or cause people to stop taking their medication.
Less is known about the impact of moderate exercise.
Researchers sought to compare the impact of moderate-intensity exercise on muscle injury in symptomatic and asymptomatic statin users, plus nonstatin using controls.
Symptomatic vs. asymptomatic was
determined by the presence, localization and onset of muscle cramps, pain
and/or weakness using the statin myalgia clinical index score. Researchers also
examined the association between leukocyte CoQ10 levels on muscle injury and
muscle complaints, since statins may lower CoQ10 levels and reduced levels can
predispose people to muscle injury.
All study participants walked 30, 40 or 50 km (18.6, 24.8 or 31 miles, respectively) per day at a self-selected pace for four consecutive days. Statin users had all been on the medication for at least three months.
The researchers excluded those with diabetes, hypo- or hyperthyroidism, known hereditary skeletal muscle defects, other diseases known to cause muscle symptoms or those using CoQ10 supplementation.
There were no
differences in body mass index, waist circumference, physical activity levels
or vitamin D3 levels (low vitamin D3 levels have been associated with statin-induced
myopathy and therefore may be a risk-factor for statin-associated muscle
symptoms) among the three groups at baseline.
Researchers found that statins did not
exacerbate muscle injury or muscle symptoms after moderate-intensity exercise.
“Even though muscle pain and fatigue scores were higher in symptomatic statin users at baseline, the increase in muscle symptoms after exercise was similar among the groups,” said Neeltje Allard, MD, first author of the study and researcher at the Department of integrative physiology, Radboud University Medical Center in Nijmegen, Netherlands.
“These
results demonstrate that prolonged moderate-intensity exercise is safe for
statin users and can be performed by statin users to maintain a physically
active lifestyle and to derive its cardiovascular health benefits.”
Researchers did not find a correlation
between leukocyte CoQ10 levels and muscle injury markers at baseline or after
exercise nor was there a correlation between CoQ10 levels and muscle fatigue
resistance or muscle pain scores.
In an accompanying editorial comment, Robert
Rosenson, MD, Director of Metabolism and Lipids for the Mount Sinai Health
System in New York, said patients experiencing statin associated muscle
symptoms will often avoid exercise because of muscle pain and weakness and
concerns of making the pain worse; however, exercise is essential for restoring
and maintaining fitness in people at increased risk for cardiovascular disease
or who have had a cardiovascular event.
“[Based on the study], many patients who
develop statin associated muscle symptoms may engage in a moderately intensive
walking program without concern for worsened muscle biomarkers or performance,”
he said.
Reference: “Prolonged Moderate-Intensity
Exercise Does Not Increase Muscle Injury Markers in Symptomatic or Asymptomatic
Statin Users” by Neeltje A.E. Allard, Lando Janssen, Bart Lagerwaard, Malou
A.H. Nuijten, Coen C.W.G. Bongers, Richard J. Rodenburg, Paul D. Thompson,
Thijs M.H. Eijsvogels, Willem J.J. Assendelft, Tom J.J. Schirris, Silvie
Timmers and Maria T.E. Hopman, 3 April 2023, Journal of the American College
of Cardiology.
DOI: 10.1016/j.jacc.2023.01.043