FDA admits statin drugs cause diabetes, memory loss
by Jonathan Benson, staff writer
(NaturalNews) All those doctors and medical experts who have expressed
support for handing out statin drugs like candy or adding them to
drinking water supplies may want to take a gander at new safety data
published by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA). According to
the agency's website, the FDA has issued new labeling guidelines for
statin drugs warning users that the medications can cause memory loss,
elevated blood sugar levels, and type-2 diabetes, in addition to muscle
damage and liver disease.
Patients taking Altoprev (lovastatin extended release), Crestor
(rosuvastatin), Lescol (fluvastatin), Lipitor (atorvastatin), Livalo
(pitavastatin), Mevacor (lovastatin), Pravachol (pravastatin), Zocor
(simvastatin), Advicor (lovastatin / niacin extended-release), Simcor
(simvastatin / niacin extended-release), and Vytorin (simvastatin /
ezetimibe) will want to be aware of these potentially life-altering side
effects, which are receiving little attention from the mainstream media.
"The reports about memory loss, forgetfulness and confusion span all
statin products and all age groups," writes the FDA on its website. And
concerning diabetes, the FDA writes that "raised blood sugar levels and
the development of Type 2 diabetes have been reported with the use of
statins."
Being careful not to offend its Big Pharma overlords, though, the FDA
was quick to reassure the public that the new guidelines are not all
that serious, and that patients should still keep taking their
medications. And yet out of the other side of its bureaucratic mouth,
the FDA is basically admitting that statin drugs are high-risk drugs,
which most obviously precludes implementing any of the asinine
recommendations made in recent months that everyone, including healthy
individuals, should take statin drugs.
Back in 2010, for instance, so-called experts out of Imperial
College London openly proclaimed that statin drugs should be
handed out to customers at fast food restaurants for free (http://www.naturalnews.com/029590_statin_drugs_fast_food.html).
This recommendation was made, of course, in spite of the fact that
statin drugs harm far more people than they supposedly help, and have a
long history of causing liver damage, kidney failure, and other serious
conditions (http://www.naturalnews.com/028988_statin_drugs_side_effects.html).
"The number of patients needed to be treated (with statin drugs) to
reduce one death in three years is over 100," write Kenneth W. Thomas,
'on Gilbert, and Gerd Schaller in their book Side
Affects: The Hidden Agenda of the Pharmaceutical Drug Cartel.
"This means that 99 people take [statins] for several years and get
absolutely no benefit."
Sources for this article include:
http://www.fda.gov/ForConsumers/ConsumerUpdates/ucm293330.htm