Posted by: admin on: February 10, 2012
Statins are prescribed without a single thought on all elderly with Cardiovascular risk. Here is a study which should keep us vigilant while treating postmenopausal women with statins.
Team@CMHF
According to a study published Online First in the Archives of Internal Medicine, one of the JAMA/Archives journals, using statins in postmenopausal women, is linked to an increased risk of diabetes.
Annie L. Culver, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minn., and her team evaluated data from the national, multiyear Women’s Health Initiative until 2005, which included 153,840 women without diabetes, aged on average 63.2 years. The researchers examined statin use at enrollment, and in year three. 7.04% of women reported to receive statin medication at baseline.
According to the findings, 10,242 new cases of diabetes and statin use at baseline was linked to an increased risk of diabetes.
The researchers comment:
“The results of this study imply that statin use conveys an increased risk of new-onset DM in postmenopausal woman.
However, the consequences of statin-induced DM (diabetes mellitus) have not been specifically defined and deserve more attention. Given the wide use of statins in the aging population, further studies among women, men, and diverse ethnicities will clarify DM risk and risk management to optimize therapy.”
Ref: http://www.medicalnewstoday.com/articles/240202.php
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