It was a bit of a surprise, but after my TIA (a stroke), that was apparently caused by maintaining an out of range INR for too long (my meter was apparently reporting .6 higher than it should have because of a substance that I was taking), the doctors started prescribing Lipitor. Surprisingly, in the hospital, they didn't even CHECK my cholesterol -- they prescribe Lipitor to anyone who's had a stroke because they believe that it helps to reduce plaques in the circulatory system. I could only find one paper on the subject - and it wasn't quite as definite about this capability or how it directly applied to me - but the doctors I saw believe that it helps to reduce risk of additional TIAs.
This, of course, is a terribly expensive medication - even the generic is extremely expensive unless you take your chances with foreign generics. Also -- I've read that once you've been on it for a while, stopping it can cause a heart attack.
I'm curious to see if any of you are taking Lipitor. I'm curious to see if any of you who ARE taking Lipitor were told that it's for plaque prevention.
I'm also curious (and I'll probably ask a doctor) if other statins - including time release Niacin (which costs a hell of a lot less than Lipitor) may also have the same plaque prevention capability.
(I wonder, too, that if some brave drug company came out with a generic Lipitor that cost as little as generic warfarin, if it would be something that would be prescribed, along with warfarin, to everyone taking warfarin).
This, of course, is a terribly expensive medication - even the generic is extremely expensive unless you take your chances with foreign generics. Also -- I've read that once you've been on it for a while, stopping it can cause a heart attack.
I'm curious to see if any of you are taking Lipitor. I'm curious to see if any of you who ARE taking Lipitor were told that it's for plaque prevention.
I'm also curious (and I'll probably ask a doctor) if other statins - including time release Niacin (which costs a hell of a lot less than Lipitor) may also have the same plaque prevention capability.
(I wonder, too, that if some brave drug company came out with a generic Lipitor that cost as little as generic warfarin, if it would be something that would be prescribed, along with warfarin, to everyone taking warfarin).