Type of Medication | Medications and Their Commonly Used Brand Names | What They Are Prescribed For | How Statins Work | Precautions While Using These Medicines | Missed Dose | Possible Side Effects

What They Are Prescribed For

Conditions that may require statins:

What statins do:

  • Help certain people decrease their risk of cardiovascular disease, stroke, and death if used along with diet and exercise
  • Lower total cholesterol
  • Lower LDL-cholesterol (bad cholesterol)
  • Raise HDL-cholesterol (good cholesterol)
  • Lower triglycerides
  • Lower C-reactive protein levels (a marker of inflammation)

Before prescribing a statin, your doctor will suggest that you try to reduce your risk of heart attack and stroke by diet and exercise. This typically involves reducing your intake of total fat, saturated fat, and, if you are overweight, total calories. Some people are able to lower their cholesterol and decrease their risks of heart attack and stroke by these changes alone. Medicine is prescribed only when additional help is needed. It is most effective in combination with dietary changes and regular exercise.

Precautions While Using These Medicines

If you are overweight or obese, losing weight may help decrease the need for or amount of medicine. Check with your doctor about this.

Tell your doctor about all the medicines you take. Some medicines should not be taken with statins, while others may require a different dosage level. Examples of these include:

Talk to your doctor about the medicines that you take and whether there could be an interaction with the statin.

The presence of other medical problems may affect the use of statins. Tell your doctor if you have any other medical problems, especially:

  • Alcohol abuse
  • Epilepsy that is not well controlled
  • Electrolyte or metabolic enzyme deficiencies or disorders
  • Infection
  • Liver disease or persistently high levels of liver enzymes—Statin drugs may make liver problems worse.
  • Low blood pressure
  • Organ transplant with therapy to prevent transplant rejection
  • Kidney failure
  • Recent major surgery or trauma, which may increase the risk of problems that may lead to kidney failure
  • Impending surgery, including dental surgery or emergency treatment—Be sure to tell the doctor or dentist treating you that you are taking a statin drug.

Possible Side Effects

Statin drugs are generally considered safe and few patients need to discontinue them due to adverse effects. The side effects listed here have been reported for at least one of the statins, not necessarily all of them. However, since many of the effects of statins are similar, it is possible that these side affects may occur with any one of these medicines, although they may be more common with some than with others.

The most significant adverse effects, though rare, involve the liver (elevated liver enzymes) and the muscles (different conditions called myopathy and rhabdomyolysis).

Other potential adverse effects include changes in mental status (eg, memory loss and confusion) and increased blood sugar levels.

Following up regularly with your doctor will allow him or her to detect these problems through your medical history and blood tests.

Common side effects include:

Check with your doctor as soon as possible if any of the following side effects occur:

  • Muscle aches, cramps, stiffness, tenderness, or weakness, especially if accompanied by unusual tiredness and/or fever
  • Memory loss and/or confusion
  • Symptoms of high blood sugar (eg, increased urination, extreme thirst, hunger, fatigue)
  • Brown urine
  • Ankle, feet, or leg swelling
  • Chest pain
  • Fever
  • Skin rash
  • Constant or worsening stomach pain
  • Unusual tiredness or weakness
  • Jaundice (yellowing of the eyes or skin)

Check with your doctor if any of the following side effects occur frequently and/or become bothersome:

  • Constipation
  • Diarrhea
  • Dizziness
  • Gas
  • Headache
  • Heartburn
  • Indigestion
  • Nausea
  • Stomach pain
  • Decreased sexual ability
  • Trouble sleeping