Showing posts with label Alternative therapies. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Alternative therapies. Show all posts

Wednesday, 13 April 2011

CoQ10-ergy! Still hoping!



Well, it's been over a week now that I've been trying the CoQ10 and stopped the statins. Time for another quick catch-up!

The pitch has been queered a bit this week as I developed a cold which forced up my blood sugars and left me achey and feverish.

However, the cold has dried up very quickly (by my own horribly low standards of recovery speed!). My throat is  quite sore, still, which is either from the cold, or maybe the typical M.E.-type of razor-bladey throat.

My Mum was over at the weekend as usual to help with domestic stuff. The weather was so beautiful last weekend here in northern England. Warm temperatures up in the 60s, sunshine getting everyone out in the gardens. Mum,  bless her, gave my back lawn its first taste of the lawnmower this season, while I pottered, sitting down on a chair most of the time, to do a spot of pruning. 

I managed well enough, with frequent rests and naps to keep me going, but considering I had a virus this week too, I'm really pleased to have achieved as much as we did.

I've had plenty of "payback" from that activity since then, in the first three days of this week. (The sun's taken its hat back off and the temperature has plummeted!) But on the whole, since stopping the statins and taking the CoQ10, my head has felt "clearer" and I've been able to wake earlier and felt more alert, I think. 

My current dose is about 100mg CoQ10 a day, taken in the morning. This means taking 10 capsules of 10mg, from a bottle of just 100! As you can guess, this is rapidly diminishing the stock of pills. But I have some more on order, the cheapest I could find online from a company doing a BOGOF (buy one get one free) deal. The new tabs will be a higher dose of 100mg each, and I'm getting 30 capsules with 30 extra free for £14.99 from a company called "Simply Supplements" at 


I did some comparison of the prices per mg of more than a dozen brands and this was the cheapest I found online. However, after clicking send, I realised I hadn't compared the unit price of the Holland and Barrett original purchase from a branch in town. This actually proved the cheapest (about 10p per mg compared to 24p per mg). One online pharmacy was actually charging 99p per mg, while most seemed to be about the 50p mark. This is frankly unaffordable longterm, but if I am convinced of their good effects, as I said before, I can just keep them in reserve for days of particular energy need.

The original Enada Nadh has quickly run out, and as it has a very similar function to the related coenzyme, I am persisting with the readily available  CoQ10 alone. Mainly because it is well documented in the M.E. community and also among the statin takers of the world, of whose number I'm a member on both counts!

I've slept quite well, most nights, and the main difference is a clearer (if not totally clear!) head. I still struggle for words and co-ordination when I'm getting tired etc, but onward and upward! I don't think I'm as itchy as I was prior to stopping the Simvastatin. A patch on my left shoulder blade has calmed down a little.

Sadly, the online delivery from Simply Supplements was promised for the following day if ordered before 6.  I ordered on Sunday evening and even allowing for the weekend etc, it's now Wednesday! Still, I'm not quite out of the original stock yet, so if they come soon, I'll be able to go seamlessly onto the 100mg capsules by the end of the week, in the build up to Easter with its extra energy challenges!

As ever, watch this space!


Tuesday, 5 April 2011

Statins? Better out than in ?

Statins? Is there something we should be told?

Reading up yesterday online about CoQ10 brought up lots of people's appalling experiences of the side effects of statins, which deplete CoQ10 in the body.  As I mentioned in my last blog entry, I was put on Simvastatin not long before my total collapse with M.E. that left me housebound and bedbound for much of the time back then and still affected now most days, even five years later.



A friend emailed me after reading yesterday's blog (thanks, friend, you know who you are!) to share his own experience of the devastating effects of taking Simvastatin. From a fit and competent athlete, he went to a life of severe pain to the extent he was considering hip replacements!
When my friend had stopped taking them, he was quickly free of the intense muscle pains his own doctor had failed to link to the statin therapy! His doctor still insisted the statins could save life with lowered cholesterol. But what's the point if you are too crippled by their side effects to have any quality of life? Let US decide what's right for us, given all the facts, please!

Another friend of his with Parkinson's disease (another illness that involves the central nervous system) was experiencing his own dire consequences from taking statins that left him unable to drive from pain. Merely stopping taking Simvastatin made those extra crippling symptoms disappear within days!


Another friend of mine, in her seventies now, also had to discontinue taking statins some years back because of the pain caused in her muscles and nerves. Online, the anecdotal evidence that some are made much worse by statin "therapy" is overwhelming. If you're in any doubt, just do a bit of googling on "statins"!


A couple of years ago, after going on the Type 1 Diabetes Carbohydrate Counting course that helped me reduce my high insulin intake by about a sixth and so very rapidly drop the extra few stone I'd piled on after becoming unable to exercise and walk/cycle everywhere as I'd done all my life before M.E., a diabetes nurse was looking at my meds list. She saw the statins there, recommended for all diabetics with a history of heart disease or stroke in the family (my maternal gran died at 52 from atherosclerosis, my dad had a stroke at 45 and died without recovering at 66 plus lots more related circulatory disease on both side of my genes).


Although she had no experience of M.E., she knew some of the symptoms like profound disabling fatique and muscle/nerve pain, and suggested I try coming off the statins for a week or so to see if it made any difference. I did, and maybe because I was going through a "better" period, didn't really notice a dramatic difference and so didn't pursue it further.

I went back on them so (typical me!) the doc wouldn't notice my statin prescription had been reduced without consultation, to spare her feelings! I was also euphoric over the new better diabetic control and being freed to lose the weight the M.E. had so frustratingly slapped on me. (Glad at last to be free of the misguided question: "Ooh! I thought they must've put you on steroids!" on top of everything else!).

Now I read online that one doctor with a particular interest in M.E (Dr Sarah Myhill - who got struck off at one point, I believe, for not toeing the party line of the NHS and drug companies with her insightful advice to desperate patients), says:

"My guess is that statins by reducing the cholesterol that the brain loves, are contributing to our current epidemic of Alzheimer’s Disease. Certainly it is rare for my CFS patients to tolerate statins – nearly always they are made ill by them." (c) Dr Myhill's own website @ www.drmyhill.co.uk


Then a full explanation here on the U.S. www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov site:

"The results show that lowered levels of CoQ10 play a role in the pathophysiology of ME/CFS and that symptoms, such as fatigue, and autonomic and neurocognitive symptoms may be caused by CoQ10 depletion. Our results suggest that patients with ME/CFS would benefit from CoQ10 supplementation in order to normalize the low CoQ10 syndrome and the IO&NS disorders. The findings that lower CoQ10 is an independent predictor of chronic heart failure (CHF) and mortality due to CHF may explain previous reports that the mean age of ME/CFS patients dying from CHF is 25 years younger than the age of those dying from CHF in the general population. Since statins significantly decrease plasma CoQ10, ME/CFS should be regarded as a relative contraindication for treatment with statins without CoQ10 supplementation."


So now's the moment to try again.

Last night I stopped my statins (40mg per day), to see if they indeed are causing me more grief than I realised. I'm continuing with the CoQ10 (50mg today), which will hopefully redress the balance of the CoQ10 the statins have leeched over the years! Also, continuing with the Enada NADH (15mg) my other friend recommended from her sister's positive experience of it, which is yet another way to supplement the mitrochondrial pathways to ATP energy my body lacks.


Thanks to all friends online and off for your wisdom, kindness, patience, humour and loving support over a lifetime. One day, you'll have the real me back, game for anything, overtaking dawdlers in the street, full of beans... but maybe not statins, any more!


I could open a ruddy pharmacy, me! But maybe statins won't be wasting space there for long...

Sunday, 3 April 2011

Enada NADH Progress Report Day 4

Another update.
Yesterday I took 10mg of the Enada and today took another 15mg before breakfast.
Fasting blood sugars within the normal range but a couple of minor hypos both days, between mealtimes.


M.E. symptoms particularly trying this weekend, which could still be a knock on effect from last weekend's major challenge leading worship on the Sunday morning. Maybe I'm not taking a large enough dose of the Enada to hammer the deficit?

Nights have been disturbed, waking up several times every couple of hours with the sensation of lying on a "burning mat" as if lower back region on fire, actually generating heat I could feel from outside too. Getting "benign fasciculations" (muscle twitching and fluttering) in calves, soles of feet, toes, chest, arms, fingers, palms, lower back, eye region. These are observable from the outside. Core muscles in stomach area sore (feeling inflamed) and tender to touch, exhausting to sit up. Tender lymph nodes in neck and under arms, tiring sometimes even to lift arms for any length of time.


Last evening (Saturday) my whole skin felt it was crawling and itching, and I felt feverish with flu-like symptoms. Skin hot to the touch. Eyes reacting to ordinary light by the evening. Hyperacusis (sounds appearing too loud to me, or startlingly loud intermittently). Kneecaps feel "rubbery" and unstable.


Was determined to go to church, when I might normally have rested because of severity of M.E. this weekend. It was Mother's Day, for one thing, and wanted to give Mum a good day. Plus a dear friend of ours had texted on Saturday to say if we were going to be at church today, she would take a bus through from her home in town to share the special service with us.


Just walking round the corner to church (a five to ten minutes paced stroll on a beautiful sunny spring morning) was almost a challenge too far. Having been unable to keep warm "inside" for the past few days (this often happens since M.E. - my inner body temperature control is all up the spout, a common M.E. symptom) the friend asked several times during the service whether I was ok (visibly shaking and struggling to stand for the hymns probably gave a clue!) She was amazed how cold my face and hands were to the touch. I wasn't! Lol!

Co-ordinating to stand, smile, sing and focus on the words on the screen by the last hymn was a challenge, to say the least. The floor was turning to "rubber" (haha - so inconsiderate!).


By the time I went in for coffee after the service, my brain was fried. I had difficulty remembering some of the words I wanted to say to carry on various conversations with friends. Not so unusual for we middle aged, you may say! Wish it really was so simple. M.E. brainfog is recognisably different from the inside, believe me! Things were going into slow motion and going blurry round the edges by now. That and carrrying a plate and cup across the room and selecting a table to sit on with friends, was all I could manage, with a little help!


After this minor period of 'rest', decided that taking Mum for a Mothering Sunday pub lunch would save the energy I'd have had to expend preparing, cooking, serving (serving often uses up more units of energy than the cooking), washing and drying the pots etc. Sitting in a quiet familiar local pub, semi-dark and quiet before the later rush (the pub in question was actually slightly closer to get to on foot than walking home straight away), I got a bit more time to sit and recoup my dwindling energy and pain resources.


It was good to see Mum enjoying her Roasted Vegetable Jalfrezi, Vanilla Ice Cream and Cappuccino with complementary biscuit (not all on same plate!) and I knew I could rest up later. Real life, including things like special occasions, doesn't take account of the need for "pacing", of course.


Once home again today, I've not been really up to much else, and have had to sleep, on and off, for most of the day since then. I am now very hot and flesh crawling again, ears sore and overreactive to sounds, muscles in hands feel inflamed and are twitching, weak as I type, but again, I want to make sure I do this update before it becomes a bigger job to remember what has happened by tomorrow!


Tomorrow I may try to up the Enada dosage to 20mg, as I believe a slightly larger rather than the minimum dose is more beneficial for M.E., according to the experience of other sufferers I've read about in the past. I'm already a third of the way through the 30 tablets that cost me more than a tenner!

Till then, I'm hoping for some wholesome sleep tonight.




Night night, sleep tight,
Mind the bugs don't bite (or those itchy, invisible creepy crawlies I can feel flickering over various muscle groups! Lol!)