My husband has high cholesterol and knows that this is not good.
But he would rather take the cholesterol-lowering medication that
his doctor has prescribed than change his diet. This worries me,
because I am afraid there might be side effects from the drugs that
we won't know about until it's too late. I've told him that he should
change his eating habits but nothing I say seems to make any difference.
Is there anything I can say to him that might change his mind? He
says he hates me nagging at him.
Julie
Dear Julie,
I would be concerned, too, if I were you. In August, 2001, a cholesterol
drug taken by 700,000 Americans, Bayer Pharmaceutical's Baycol,
was pulled off the market. The reason? It was definitively linked
to 31 U.S. deaths and at least 9 more fatalities abroad.
The disease that caused these deaths, rhabdomyolysis, is a life-threatening
condition in which muscle cells are destroyed and enter the bloodstream.
Symptoms include back pain, muscle pain, weakness, tenderness, fever,
dark urine, nausea and vomiting.
Baycol is a "statin," a family of drugs that lower cholesterol and
thereby reduce the risk of heart attacks. Other statins - such as
Mevacor, Pravachol, Zocor, Lesco and Lipitor - have all been linked,
though more rarely, to rhabdomyolysis.
I don't know what might motivate your husband to take responsibility
for his lifestyle and health. Perhaps, instead of telling him that
he should change his eating habits, you might say to him, "Honey,
I love you and I want you to be around for a long, long, time. I
wish for you the most vibrant health and the highest quality of
life that is possible. That's why I want you to eat as healthfully
as possible. Is there anything I can do to help?"