Pitavastatin and Lp(a)

I’ll be lazy:

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Long term use of Crestor pushes some prediabetics over the edge into diabetes.
Well I'm taking care of a friend who is 87 and has type2 along with CHF. I daresay putting him on lipitor was dumb, and his PCP agreed and wanted to put him on a new statin and so I'm thinking pitavastatin might work. My thinking was nothing to do with diabetes though I was looking at lipitor and it's ability to enter muscle tissue as the primary reason as my friend has typical sides leg pain brain fog muscle weakness and such. But I am not surprised here.

Fwiw between his CHF meds and me working with him via resistance training, a very custom tailored diet and r-ala and berberine his blood sugar has come down from 180s in September (last hospitalization, which was what prompted me to work with him) to 90 as measured a few days ago. My hope/theory is that keeping his blood sugar controlled his heart will improve.
 
Well I'm taking care of a friend who is 87 and has type2 along with CHF. I daresay putting him on lipitor was dumb, and his PCP agreed and wanted to put him on a new statin and so I'm thinking pitavastatin might work. My thinking was nothing to do with diabetes though I was looking at lipitor and it's ability to enter muscle tissue as the primary reason as my friend has typical sides leg pain brain fog muscle weakness and such. But I am not surprised here.

Fwiw between his CHF meds and me working with him via resistance training, a very custom tailored diet and r-ala and berberine his blood sugar has come down from 180s in September (last hospitalization, which was what prompted me to work with him) to 90 as measured a few days ago. My hope/theory is that keeping his blood sugar controlled his heart will improve.

Pitavastatin’s main selling point is that it’s a statin for people who can’t tolerate other statins. It has an extremely low risk of any side effect, doesn’t harm insulin sensitivity (some studies suggest it improves it). It’s slightly less potent at lowering LDL in some, but that’s a worthwhile tradeoff for the safety profile.
 
Pitavastatin 4 mg and Zetia 10 mg had my Lp(a) undetectable, ApoB low 50’s, and LDL at 33 on test, tren, masteron, and anavar (a stack that is known to cause severe dyslipidemia). Zero side effects.
 
Pitavastatin’s main selling point is that it’s a statin for people who can’t tolerate other statins. It has an extremely low risk of any side effect, doesn’t harm insulin sensitivity (some studies suggest it improves it). It’s slightly less potent at lowering LDL in some, but that’s a worthwhile tradeoff for the safety profile.
I'll run it by his PCP. They are giving it to him to stabilize plaque and lower inflammation I believe.
 
I'll run it by his PCP. They are giving it to him to stabilize plaque and lower inflammation I believe.

Be prepared, they’re unlikely to be familiar with it, or think it’s still $500/mo (it’s a cheap generic now).

Consider showing them the info here (click the >65 years old and any other section that’s relevant:)


 
Be prepared, they’re unlikely to be familiar with it, or think it’s still $500/mo (it’s a cheap generic now).

Consider showing them the info here (click the >65 years old and any other section that’s relevant:)


I will try. Kaiser has been a big letdown honestly. Sad, because my friend looks at them like they saved his life or something. They barely give him the time of day. Yet he obeys with his deer In headlights expression. He didn't give me the time of day for years and only recently after his fourth or fifth trip to the ER and weeks long stay at the hospital did he begrudgingly listen. And of course now he's my sole responsibility I have to do everything for him. Pain in my ass.
 
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