The Hidden Diabetes Link No One is Telling You About...
Posted By Dr. Mercola | March 28 2011
Coronary heart disease is a leading cause of death in the
United States, killing one in five adults, and doctors are very quick to
prescribe statins. In fact, statin drug sales rank in the billions each year
globally.
These drugs are so pervasive that they are no longer just
indicated for hypercholesterolemia, they are also being prescribed for
elevations in C reactive protein, and are promoted for kids as young as eight
years old.
Heart disease is so pervasive that some have boldly suggested
that we should put statins in our water supply as some kind of protection.
This is very disturbing.
Do You Really Need a Statin Drug?
By far, statin drugs are the most popular
cholesterol-lowering drugs available today. They work in your liver by
preventing your body from making cholesterol. The drugs block an enzyme called
HMG-CoA Reductase. This can be helpful, but only if you are one of those people
who happen to produce too much cholesterol.
It doesn't do a good job at removing it from your clogged
arteries, contrary to what most people think.
Physicians and health experts now agree that statins seem to
offer more benefit through their ability to reduce dangerous inflammatory
chemicals in your body, rather than by reducing production of cholesterol, which
usually leads to uncomfortable, unwanted and dangerous side effects.
One
study found that lowering cholesterol too much actually backfires.
Cholesterol is good for you; it's one of your body's most
powerful antioxidants, it makes important neurotransmitters and sex hormones so
this madness to lower it as much as possible really concerns me. Plus, I believe
the indiscriminate use of statins has contributed to the staggering rise in
diabetes…
The Statin—Diabetes Connection Few People Know About
I watched this happen to my mom who was given a statin, and
then told months later she suddenly had diabetes. All of a sudden? This happened
many years ago, and it began my search to understand the connection. It also
prompted me to write a book on the subject entitled "Diabetes
Without Drugs" (Rodale, 2010).
It typically happens like this:
Many statin users come back to see their physician for a
routine visit and after the blood work is drawn, they find their cholesterol
ratios may be improved, but now they have high blood glucose.
It's entirely possible that some physicians then mistakenly
diagnose their patients with "Type 2 diabetes" when in fact they just have
hyperglycemia—a side effect, and the result of a medication that was prescribed
to them months earlier.
Do you think you have type 2 diabetes?
I will provide more information so you can see for yourself
that so-called "diabetes" diagnosis might not really be genuine diabetes. It may
just be hyperglycemia (high blood sugar)—the result of your cholesterol
medication, and for some people, it may be reversible with drug discontinuation.
Whether or not you are able to discontinue your medication is between you and
your physician.
Research Suggesting Raised Blood Sugar is a Side Effect of
Statin Use
Several studies have indicated that statins can cause high
blood sugar, which can be mistaken for "diabetes." For example, researchers in
Glasgow, Scotland conducted a meta analysis, known as the JUPITER trial, which
took into account 13 statin trials that each included 1,000 patients or more.
The participants were followed for over than a year. The conclusion was there
was indeed an increase, albeit small, in the development of Type 2 diabetes.
It should be considered that some of the patients in this
meta analysis already had symptoms of insulin resistance or metabolic syndrome,
so it could be said that they were on their way to diabetes anyway.
Now consider another
meta-analysis published in the Lancet Here, the researchers reviewed
randomized controlled trials beginning in 1994 and ending in 2009, for a total
of 91,140 participants who took either a statin or a placebo.
They found that people treated with statin drugs showed a
nine percent increase for diabetes. They did not evaluate other factors however,
which would be considered pre-diabetes, so I suspect their nine percent number
to be on the low side.
Insulin is a pancreatic hormone that reduces blood sugar. You
want some insulin to maintain blood glucose levels, but too much of it is
bad—it's an inflammatory compound in your body when it is elevated. And guess
what? The use of statin drugs appears to INCREASE your insulin levels! High
insulin is extremely harmful to your health.
For starters, elevated insulin levels lead to heart disease,
and isn't that the reason cholesterol drugs are prescribed in the first place?
The ratio of glucose to insulin should be less than 10:1,
this ratio is far more important than the levels of glucose or insulin alone.
Keep that in mind if you seek a complete recovery. For more information about
the harmful effects of elevated insulin levels, see
my article on dearpharmacist.com,
or my book Diabetes Without Drugs.
You want to keep insulin normal, to protect yourself from
heart disease and high blood pressure. Chronically elevated insulin causes a
cascade of inflammatory chemicals and high cortisol which lead to belly fat,
high blood pressure, heart attacks, chronic fatigue, thyroid disruption, plus
major diseases like Parkinson's, Alzheimer's and cancer.
Unfortunately, the most popular cholesterol drugs in the
world seem to increase insulin levels. However, that's just one mechanism by
which these drugs can raise your risk for diabetes.
How Statins Raise Your Insulin
Keeping things simple, you might imagine it like this: When
you eat a meal that contains starches and sugar, some of the excess sugar goes
to your liver, which then stores it away as cholesterol and triglycerides. Now
stay with me -- when you have a statin on board, it's like a message to your
liver saying, "No! Don't make any more cholesterol, please stop."
So your liver sends the sugar back OUT to your bloodstream.
As a result, your blood sugar goes up.
In 2009, it was proven that statins could directly raise blood sugar,
whether or not you have diabetes. Over 340,000 people were included before this
conclusion was made. The people who did not have diabetes but took statins
experienced a rise in blood glucose from 98 mg/dl to 105 mg/dl. Those who
already had diabetes and also took statins experienced a rise from 102 mg/dl to
141 mg/dl.
After adjustments for age and medication use were considered,
researchers concluded that both diabetic and non-diabetic statin users showed a
statistically significant rise in blood sugar.
Why take all these risks, just to get the convenience of
taking a pill instead of eating a better diet and exercising?
It's been scientifically discussed and even
published in JAMA
that eating a better diet could lower cholesterol as well as the statin drug
lovastatin.
And of course, there are so many other benefits to eating a
healthier diet that consists of fruits, vegetables, nuts, seeds, and lean meats.
Besides feeling better and increasing lifespan, you can squeeze into those
skinny jeans you're hiding in your closet.
Another way statins can affect your blood sugar is via their
"drug mugging" effect. A drug mugger is my term, and the title of my newest
book, which describes how a drug can rob your body's warehouse of a valuable
nutrient. In the case of statins, they rob your body of two different nutrients,
both of which are needed to maintain ideal blood sugar.
Two Important Nutrients Decimated by Statins
The first nutrient that is mugged is vitamin D. There have
been mixed studies regarding the D-depletion effect of statins, but statins
reduce your body's natural ability to create active vitamin D called
1,25-dihydroxycholecalciferol, shortened to "calcitriol" when it is eventually
converted to its active hormone form.
This happens because statins reduce cholesterol, and you need
cholesterol to make vitamin D! It is the raw material that exposure to UVB from
sunlight will convert to vitamin D.
It is well documented that D improves insulin resistance, so
needless to say, when you take a drug mugger of vitamin D (like statins), then
you increase your risk for diabetes.
More specifically, a 2004 study published in the American
Journal of Clinical Nutrition determined that raising a person's serum vitamin D
levels (from 25 to 75 nmol/l) could improve insulin sensitivity by a whopping 60
percent.
Compare that to the blockbuster diabetes drug metformin, one
of our pharmaceutical gold-standards, which can dispose of blood sugar by a
meager 13 percent according to the New England Journal of Medicine.
Now, statins also suppresses your natural coenzyme Q10— also
called "ubiquinol" in its active form; it makes energy for every cell in your
body, and it's produced mainly in your liver.
This powerful antioxidant just so happens to also play a role
in maintaining blood glucose. When you deplete levels of CoQ10 by taking a drug
mugger of it, like a statin drug, then you lose that benefit. You also raise
your risk for heart failure, high blood pressure and heart disease as CoQ10
deficiencies can contribute to those conditions. A study by Hodgson et al,
published in 2002 found that 200mg CoQ10 taken daily caused a 0.4 percent
reduction in hemoglobin A1c.
Moreover, CoQ10 protects your body from oxidative stress, a
strong contributing factor in the development of diabetes, metabolic syndrome
and heart attacks. You want to make sure you have enough CoQ10 (or ubiquinol) on
board to protect every cell in your body. The take home point is that statins
annihilate this compound and you need it for good health.
In summary, if you take a statin medication and you've been
told that you have diabetes, it may be drug-induced, and it's possible that it
can be reversed over the course of time. However, you will have to eat right,
exercise, and take supplements that help to lower your risk for heart disease
naturally.
About the Author
Suzy Cohen, R.Ph., has been a licensed pharmacist for 22
years, and has had a weekly syndicated health column for the past 13 years which
you can get for free by signing up at her website Widely recognized as
"America's most trusted pharmacist," she has appeared on The Dr OZ Show, The
View, Good Morning America Health and The 700 Club.
Cohen is also the author of three books:
The 24-Hour Pharmacist,
Diabetes Without Drugs, and
Drug Muggers: Keep Your Medicine from Stealing the Life Out of You.
For more information, see
www.SuzyCohen.com.
Sources:
Journal of the Federation
of American Societies for Experimental Biology May 1, 2004; 18(7): 805-815
Journal of Investigative Medicine March 2009; 57(3): 495-499
The Lancet February 2010; 375(9716): 735 – 742
The Lancet February 27, 2010; 375(9716): 700 – 701
International Journal of Obesity February 8, 2011 [Epub ahed of print]
American Heart Journal (ENHANCE trial) February 2005; 149(2): 234-239
Lancet February 27, 2010; 375(9716): 735-42
Journal of Investigative Medicine March 2009; 57(3): 495-499
Statins are HMG-CoA reductase inhibitors; that is, they act
by blocking the enzyme in your liver responsible for making cholesterol (HMG-CoA
reductase). The fact that statin drugs cause side effects is well
established—there are now 900 studies proving their adverse effects, which run
the gamut from muscle problems to increased cancer risk.
I first learned of the association between statins and
diabetes when I had lunch at Expo West with Suzy Cohen, who is a nationally
syndicated pharmacist. She offers compelling evidence that this popular drug is
further worsening the epidemic of diabetes, and that untold numbers of people
are then being treated for a disease they do not actually have. Rather, they may
actually be suffering from a side effect of the statin drug.
One of the most recent studies supporting this finding was
published in February in the International Journal of Obesity. Reuters
recently reported on the findings stating:
"Australian researchers found that among more than 11,400 adults with high blood
pressure and/or diabetes, those on beta-blockers weighed more, on average, and
had larger waistlines. And in a separate look at 30 patients with high blood
pressure, they found that people on beta-blockers generally burned fewer
calories and fat after a meal -- measured by a device called a calorimeter.
The patients on beta blockers also reported lower physical activity levels in
their day-to-day lives. (Beta blockers are suspected of curbing people's
physical activity because the drugs slow the heart rate and may cause people to
tire more easily.) Together, the findings suggest that beta blockers lead to
weight gain by curbing people's calorie expenditure, according to the
researchers, led by Dr. Paul Lee of St. Vincent's Hospital in Sydney.
..."Our hypothesis is that widespread use of beta blockers
may fuel the modern-day obesity epidemic," he told Reuters Health..."
Ninety-Nine Out of 100 People do NOT Need a Statin Drugo:p>
That these drugs have dominated the market the way they have
is a testimony to the power of marketing, corruption and massive conflict of
interest, because the odds are very high— greater than 100 to 1—that if you're
taking a statin, you don't need it.
TThe ONLY subgroup that might benefit are those born with a
genetic defect called familial hypercholesterolemia, as this makes them
resistant to traditional measures of normalizing cholesterol.
Part of seeing past the propaganda is to understand that
cholesterol is NOT the cause of heart disease. If your physician is urging you
to check your total cholesterol, then you should know that this test will tell
you virtually nothing about your risk of heart disease, unless it is 330 or
higher.
These two ratios are far more potent indicators for heart disease and are the ones you should pay attention to: o:p>
1.
HDL/Total Cholesterol Ratio: Should ideally be
above 24 percent. If below 10 percent, you have a significantly elevated risk
for heart disease.
2.
Triglyceride/HDL Ratio: Should be below 2.
I have seen a number of people with total cholesterol levels
over 250 who were actually at low risk for heart disease due to their elevated
HDL levels. Conversely, I have seen many people with cholesterol levels under
200 who had a very high risk of heart disease, based on their low HDL.
Your body NEEDS cholesterol—it is important in the production
of cell membranes, hormones, vitamin D and bile acids that help you to digest
fat. Cholesterol also helps your brain form memories and is vital to your
neurological function.
TThere is also strong evidence that having too little
cholesterol INCREASES your risk for cancer, memory loss, Parkinson's disease,
hormonal imbalances, stroke, depression, suicide, and violent behavior.
If You Take tatins, You MUST Take CoQ10 or Ubiquinol
Another important aspect that most doctors fail to tell you
about is that statins are non-specific inhibitors of not just one, but a number
of very important liver enzymes, one of of the most important being Coenzyme
Q10. Hence, if you take statin drugs without taking CoQ10, your health is at
serious risk. Unfortunately, this describes the majority of people who take them
in the United States.
CoQ10 is a cofactor (co-enzyme) that is essential for the
creation of ATP molecules, which you need for cellular energy production. Organs
such as your heart have higher energy requirements, and therefore require more
CoQ10 to function properly.
Statins deplete your body of CoQ10, which can have
devastating results.
Physicians rarely inform people of this risk and only
occasionally advise them to take a CoQ10 supplement. As your body gets more and
more depleted of CoQ10, you may suffer from fatigue, muscle weakness and
soreness, and eventually heart failure.
Coenzyme Q10 is also very important in the process of
neutralizing free radicals. So when your CoQ10 is depleted, you enter a vicious
cycle of increased free radicals, loss of cellular energy, and damaged
mitochondrial DNA.
If you decide to take a CoQ10 supplement and are over the age
of 40, it is important to choose the reduced version, called ubiquinol.
Ubiquinol is a FAR more effective form—I personally take 1-3 a day since it has
such far ranging benefits.
Optimizing Your Cholesterol Levels, Naturally
The real tragedy here is that for nearly everyone that is
prescribed these drugs, there's simply no reason to be taking themand suffer the
damaging health effects from these dangerous drugs when they are far more
effective, less dangerous and inexpensive ways to optimize your cholesterol
profile.
The fact is that 75 percent of your cholesterol is produced
by your liver, which is influenced by your insulin levels. Therefore, if you
optimize your insulin level, you will automatically optimize your cholesterol.
It follows, then, that my primary recommendations for safely
regulating your cholesterol have to do with modifying your diet and lifestyle:
·
RReduce, with the plan of eliminating, grains
and sugars in your diet. Eat the right foods for your nutritional type, and
consume a good portion of your food raw.
· MMake sure you are getting plenty of high
quality, animal-based omega 3 fats, such as krill oil.
· Other heart-healthy foods include olive oil,
coconut and coconut oil, organic raw dairy products and eggs, avocados, raw nuts
and seeds, and organic grass-fed meats as appropriate for your nutritional type.
·
EExercise daily. Make sure you incorporate peak
fitness exercises, which also optimizes your human growth hormone (HGH)
production.
·
Address your emotional challenges. My favorite
technique for stress management is the Emotional Freedom Technique (EFT).
· Avoid smoking or drinking alcohol excessively.
·
BBe sure to get plenty of good, restorative
sleep.
Unlike statin drugs, which lower your cholesterol at the
expense of your health, these lifestyle strategies represent a holistic approach
that will benefit your overall health—which includes a healthy cardiovascular
system.
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