HealthCentral.com

People's Pharmacy


For more up-to-date information on drugs, herbs and home remedies visit The People's Pharmacy Home Site at peoplespharmacy.us


Lipitor Linked To Memory Loss Episodes

Posting Date: 11/14/2005

Q. In 1999 shortly after I began taking Lipitor I was working at the church with other volunteers. I went off to use the restroom and after half an hour someone came to look for me. I was walking around in a circle and couldn?t remember much. I was hospitalized for two days, but all the tests were negative.

Five years later I had another episode and missed a doctor?s appointment. He called, since I am never late, and found that I was repeating myself and not making sense. He called my wife to alert her.

In the meantime, a friend of mine came to the house. I recognized him, but he also thought I was acting strange.

This attack of transient global amnesia (TGA) lasted three hours. The neurologist who diagnosed it said he is seeing more cases than ever before.

Since I read in your column of a connection with cholesterol-lowering drugs, I wonder if people taking statins should wear some kind of medical alert bracelet like diabetics do. You never know where you will be when a TGA strikes.

A. The link between Lipitor (or other statins) and memory problems like total global amnesia remains controversial. We have heard, though, from many other readers who report similar experiences. Your idea of wearing an ID bracelet to alert medical professionals makes sense.

To learn more about this connection, readers may order an hour-long radio interview in which we discuss statins and memory with medical experts. To order this CD, ?The Dark Side of Statins,? visit our new Web site, www.peoplespharmacy.com and look for radio show #523.

Q. You have suggested Sonata for a reader who wakens early in the morning and can?t get back to sleep. This is a good recommendation, but you should also warn people not to drink alcohol in the evening. This is one of the most common causes of early morning wakefulness. When the alcohol wears off, the person wakes up.




Symptoms Checker