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Lipitor And Niaspan Resource
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Lipitor And Niaspan Resource in Answers
My mom is currently taking Niaspan and Lipitor and I am wanting to try a more natural approach...? My mom is 68 years old and she has been on cholesterol medication for a few years now. I am afraid of the medications long term side effects my sister also had high cholesterol and was able to control it with a medicine called Cholestoff. My mom has a dr visit for blood work tomorrow and I was thinking that would be a good time to see if we could try it. I wanted to get her on the Cholestoff and maybe a vitamin B supplement to replace the Niaspan and some Garlic tablets. I am not sure if the Dr has her best interest in mind of if he is making a commission off the drugs he is prescribing because from my understanding the Niaspan is basically Niacin which is sold OTC but she is paying over 100.00 monthly after insurance and medicare. And also I thought the Lipitor was only to get her cholesterol under control but he said she would be on it for life. I don't want her to take meds that end up messing something else up (like her liver) later on down the line if we can take care of it naturally with diet and natural things I just don't know what the dr will say and I am wondering if any one else had similar experiences? First off I am not trying to experiment I am simply seeking other options/alternatives of treatment that will fully be discussed with her doctor I am not planning on doing anything without his approval. I am not experienced in dealing with the health problems of the elderly and am simply trying to broaden my horizons to improve her quality and length of life because I love her. She is the one always complaining about all the meds she has to take and I don't want her on something that is going to make her take something else in the long run.

natpractitioner replied: "Well, I can't tell you what your mother's doctor will say either, but what you must do is make an appointment at your local naturopath and he/she will work out a treatment plan for your mother in conjunction with her current doctor and they can try to get her to reduce her meds or get off of them altogether, but she should not do anything without the advice of her naturopath and without letting her doctor know what she is doing. You are doing the right thing in trying to help your mother lower the amounts of meds that she is taking, as there are much healthier alternatives if she is willing to make lifestyle changes."

inverse_mushroom_cloud replied: "Nice that you are willing to experiment with your mother's life/health. Natural approaches are not proven effective in randomized clinical trials. Your mother's doctor is not getting kickbacks from drug companies. FDA would shut these companies down in a heartbeat if they ever caught a whiff of activity like that. It amazes me that you'll believe paranoid crap you read on random internet sites, but don't believe the person who has had years of training in medicine, is likely board certified to practice medicine, and has YEARS of experience in his craft. If you want to experiment with alternative methods, experiment on yourself, not your mother."

Az R replied: "Couple problems. Lipitor is a drug called a statin. They're very safe, very effective, an no they don't do anything to the liver. The problem is that if you use a statin for a while, and then stop taking it your cholesterol will go back to where it was before. In short, they only work while you take them, and your body returns to homeostasis if you stop. It does strike me as kind of silly to pay that much for niacin. But what worries me is pulling her off the lipitor. Your mother is at an age where you're going to have a lot of trouble doing any sort of dietary intervention, the metabolism of a 68 year old isn't quite capable of changing cholesterol metabolism that much."

Neil T replied: "hypercet is a good all natural medicine for cholesterol learn more here"

cvo replied: "Educate yourself on foods and save your mother's life! I am now completely organic because of GMOs. (first link) Doctor's intersest in not in the patient (see link #2) MSG will eventually kill everyone using it. (see link # 3) high frucotse corn syrup is GMO and deadly! My mom is 82 years old and was eating lots of aspartame. Her memory got so bad we thought she had Alzheimer's. I put her on an organic diet and took away all aspartame and her memory improved 100% from what is was before! I developed severe bloating and I only ate what I thought was healthy and nutritious (lots of salads). Then I learned about GMOs and switched to organic. Suddenly my bloating ailment of close to a year has disappeared in a week! Read your food labels and do not buy these harmful ingredients: mono sodium glutamate, high fructose corn syrup, aspartame or anything sugar free. Changing her diet will change her health."

What are side effects and drug interaction of niaspan? Triglycerides, 271, Cholesterol, 130LDL, 33 HDL, I have just been given a low fat, low cholesterol Diet. Haven't had a chance to implement. Also gave me Lipitor. On 2 blood pressure medicines and a diuretic. I think Niaspan is a little bit much?

sameer replied: "use this link hope will surely help u convey"

ratdog replied: "I was prescribed Niaspan but could not take it because of side effects (itching, rashes, flushing feeling). Lipitor, Tricor, and Avapro are my combo and have been for many years."

shaggindeb replied: "The side effects of Niacin are flushing.It can also affect your liver function tests."

c_schumacker replied: "Niaspan is the safest of the anti-hyperlipidemics. You could give it to pregnant women if need be. It unfortunately has an uncomfortable (but harmless) side effect of flushing. This can be reduced by taking an aspirin or ibuprofen a half hour before the medication. Eventually your body will get used to it. With two risk factors (hypertension and hyperlipidemia) your LDL should be at 100 or less. If you have known heart disease (prior heart attack, procedures, etc) then your LDL should be less than 70. Changing your eating habits alone will account for 10-15% reduction in the best case...most people have less response. So you don't like all of the medication? Start exercising vigorously for 90 minutes a day. Loose weight. Stop smoking (if you do). Cut back on the caffiene. I suspect you might be down to a single medication or two if you did all of those things. Doctors are not trying to poison you or put you at risk. We see a person who has lots of risk factors for heart disease, stroke, diabetes, kidney failure, and other chronic illness and we know preventing it is much better than trying to fix it. Its your body, its your choice. Good luck."

Tourist replied: "Niaspan is just the vitamin niacin but it is in a slow-release form so you are less likely to get "flushing" (like hot flashes). Niacin is a great way to lower your cholesterol - you may still have to take the Lipitor but at a less high dose than you would without (the Niaspan)."

What is the connection between green tea and certain heart medications? ....or conditions? A year ago, I was in the hosipital for 3 days with aventral fibulation. I'm now on several medications including lipitor, cardizem, niaspan, and jantoven. I really enjoy a bold cup of tea. Why should or shouldn't I drink green tea? Thanks.... I've always wondered. I'm such a dope sometimes..... they've always shortened it to "a-fib" So, you are correct EA. Wise words, DD... once again.

Alan C replied: "you should ask your dr because green tea can interact with certain meds"

Diogene's Dog replied: "Because, when or if your medication fails, the settlement from your insurance will probably be void when they find that you continued drinking tea. The medication you are on should be for the benefit of you being able to modify your life and habits to allow you to return to survivability. Green tea is full of incidental chemicals that may be of benefit to you. You may be able to return to enjoying that cup of tea, but, until then you are subject to the dictates of the pharmas and your doctor."

EA replied: "Is that atrial fibrillation? Or was it ventricle fibrillation I love tea but I try to drink the non-caffintated teas. Green teas is an antioxidant. May interact with some of the heart meds. I know it interferes with an anticoagulants. I think an occasionally cup of tea would be okay, so long that it isn't green tea."

Scooter replied: "Green tea has caffeine and that can cause heart irregularties. Check with your doctor to see if it is safe for you."

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