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Statin drugs, scholesterol, heart attack
and stroke drugs.(File Photo) Photo Gallery
>>> | BEIJING,
Nov. 4 (Xinhuanet) -- Researchers aren't sure why, yet, but a new study
shows statin drugs -- the No. 1 selling cholesterol, heart attack and stroke
drug -- may also reduce lung damage from smoking.
Current and former smokers who used statins lost less
of their lung function than those who did not, researchers recently told a
meeting of the American College of Chest Physicians.
"Until now, no medication has shown to slow
smoking-induced lung damage," said Dr. Walid Younis of the University of
Oklahoma Medical Center, who led the study. "Our study is the first to show that
statins may decrease the decline in lung function in smokers and former smokers,
and, therefore, prevent millions from developing debilitating diseases that
could eventually lead to death.
"It is conceivable that long-term statin therapy
could be used in smokers and former smokers to prevent and slow the progression
of lung diseases."
Statins seem to affect inflammation and to
benefit the lining of blood vessels and capillaries, called the epithelium.
Younis and colleagues studied 182 current smokers and
303 former smokers who were on average in their mid-60s. All had taken at
least two pulmonary function tests between 18 and 30 months apart.
Of the 485 patients, 319 had obstructive lung
disease, 99 had restrictive lung disease, 67 had normal lung function and
238 had been taking statin drugs.
Breathing capacity tests showed that patients not
taking statins lost more on two measures of lung function: forced
expiratory volume in 1 second or FEV1 and forced vital capacity or FVC.
Statin patients saw FEV1 fall by 2.5 percent over the
18-to-30-month period. Those who did not take the drugs lost an average of 12.8
percent. Statin patients lost 1.3 percent of FVC capacity compared with
10.3 percent loss in the others.
But the potential benefits of statins should not
encourage smokers to continue their habit.
"Even though statins may help with lung function,
they have no effect on preventing a patient from the major smoking-related
killer, which is lung cancer," cautioned Younis. "Therefore, smokers should
never lose their incentive to quit smoking.”
A second study presented at the same conference
confirmed other studies that have shown that statins can reduce the numbers of
strokes, heart attacks and overall deaths from any causes in heart patients.
"Our study focuses on statin use in patients with
severe, carotid artery disease," said Dr. Gautham Ravipati of the New York
Medical College in Valhalla, who led the study.
His team studied 449 patients from January 2001 to
December 2005. Of them, 298 were treated with statins and 151 were not.
Just 15 percent of the patients treated with statins
had strokes, heart attacks, or died for any reason, compared to 68 percent of
patients not taking the drugs.
"Research like this, involving these types of
incidences on these types of patients, has not previously been published,"
Ravipati said. "And what it supports is that all patients with carotid arterial
disease and (high cholesterol) should be treated with statins, unless there is
an absolute contradiction."
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