Can peripheral neuropathy caused by statins be reversed

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Statin Neuropathy

Statin Neuropathy

Statin neuropathy appears to be associated with axonal degeneration, and affects both large and small fibers.

Treatment with statins, or HMG-CoA-reductase inhibitors, reduces the risk of cardiovascular disease in patients with hypercholesterolemia. Peripheral neuropathy has been reported to occur in patients treated with statins, in both case reports1–5 and population studies6–8 showing a statistically significant association. The neuropathy can occur with different statin medications,4,9 and long term exposure appears to increase the risk for developing neurotoxicity. Statin use can also aggravate a pre-existing neuropathy.7 The neuropathy can be partially reversed with drug cessation.6,9

Statin neuropathy appears to be associated with axonal degeneration, and affects both large and small fibers. Small fiber neuropathy (SFN) may be an early manifestation, and involve both sensory or autonomic fibers.10–12 Large fiber neuropathy can be identified in routine nerve conduction studies, but diagnosis of small fiber neuropathy requires demonstration of reduced epidermal or sweat gland nerve fiber density on punch skin biopsy. In a recent study of SFN, Novak and colleagues reported that patients who were treated with statins appeared to have a non-length dependent neuropathy.12

Patients who are intolerant of statins, due to development of neuropathy or other complications, can be treated with newer, non-statin lipid lowering agents that have not been reported to be associated with peripheral neuropathy.

  1. Ahmad S. Lovastatin and peripheral neuropathy. Am Heart J. 1995;130(6):1321. [PubMed]
  1. Jacobs M. HMG-CoA reductase inhibitor therapy and peripheral neuropathy. Ann Intern Med. 1994;120(11):970. [PubMed]
  1. Jeppesen U, Gaist D, Smith T, Sindrup S. Statins and peripheral neuropathy. Eur J Clin Pharmacol. 1999;54(11):835-838. [PubMed]
  1. Ziajka P, Wehmeier T. Peripheral neuropathy and lipid-lowering therapy. South Med J. 1998;91(7):667-668. [PubMed]
  1. Phan T, McLeod J, Pollard J, Peiris O, Rohan A, Halpern J. Peripheral neuropathy associated with simvastatin. J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry. 1995;58(5):625-628. [PMC]
  1. Backes J, Howard P. Association of HMG-CoA reductase inhibitors with neuropathy. Ann Pharmacother. 2003;37(2):274-278. [PubMed]
  1. de L, van P. HMG-CoA-reductase inhibitors and neuropathy: reports to the Netherlands Pharmacovigilance Centre. Neth J Med. 2006;64(9):334-338. [PubMed]
  1. Gaist D, Jeppesen U, Andersen M, García R, Hallas J, Sindrup S. Statins and risk of polyneuropathy: a case-control study. Neurology. 2002;58(9):1333-1337. [PubMed]
  1. Chong P, Boskovich A, Stevkovic N, Bartt R. Statin-associated peripheral neuropathy: review of the literature. Pharmacotherapy. 2004;24(9):1194-1203. [PubMed]
  1. Boger M, Hulgan T, Donofrio P, Peltier A. QSART for diagnosis of statin-associated polyneuropathy. Muscle Nerve. 2011;43(2):295-296. [PubMed]
  1. Lo Y, Leoh T, Loh L, Tan C. Statin therapy and small fibre neuropathy: a serial electrophysiological study. J Neurol Sci. 2003;208(1-2):105-108. [PubMed]
  1. Novak P, Pimentel D, Sundar B, Moonis M, Qin L, Novak V. Association of Statins with Sensory and Autonomic Ganglionopathy. Front Aging Neurosci. 2015;7:191. [PMC]

Related Articles

Statin Neuropathy

Statin neuropathy appears to be associated with axonal degeneration, and affects both large and small fibers.

Treatment with statins, or HMG-CoA-reductase inhibitors, reduces the risk of cardiovascular disease in patients with hypercholesterolemia. Peripheral neuropathy has been reported to occur in patients treated with statins, in both case reports1–5 and population studies6–8 showing a statistically significant association. The neuropathy can occur with different statin medications,4,9 and long term exposure appears to increase the risk for developing neurotoxicity. Statin use can also aggravate a pre-existing neuropathy.7 The neuropathy can be partially reversed with drug cessation.6,9

Statin neuropathy appears to be associated with axonal degeneration, and affects both large and small fibers. Small fiber neuropathy (SFN) may be an early manifestation, and involve both sensory or autonomic fibers.10–12 Large fiber neuropathy can be identified in routine nerve conduction studies, but diagnosis of small fiber neuropathy requires demonstration of reduced epidermal or sweat gland nerve fiber density on punch skin biopsy. In a recent study of SFN, Novak and colleagues reported that patients who were treated with statins appeared to have a non-length dependent neuropathy.12

Patients who are intolerant of statins, due to development of neuropathy or other complications, can be treated with newer, non-statin lipid lowering agents that have not been reported to be associated with peripheral neuropathy.

  1. Ahmad S. Lovastatin and peripheral neuropathy. Am Heart J. 1995;130(6):1321.[PubMed]
  1. Jacobs M. HMG-CoA reductase inhibitor therapy and peripheral neuropathy. Ann Intern Med. 1994;120(11):970.[PubMed]
  1. Jeppesen U, Gaist D, Smith T, Sindrup S. Statins and peripheral neuropathy. Eur J Clin Pharmacol. 1999;54(11):835-838.[PubMed]
  1. Ziajka P, Wehmeier T. Peripheral neuropathy and lipid-lowering therapy. South Med J. 1998;91(7):667-668.[PubMed]
  1. Phan T, McLeod J, Pollard J, Peiris O, Rohan A, Halpern J. Peripheral neuropathy associated with simvastatin. J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry. 1995;58(5):625-628.[PMC]
  1. Backes J, Howard P. Association of HMG-CoA reductase inhibitors with neuropathy. Ann Pharmacother. 2003;37(2):274-278.[PubMed]
  1. de L, van P. HMG-CoA-reductase inhibitors and neuropathy: reports to the Netherlands Pharmacovigilance Centre. Neth J Med. 2006;64(9):334-338.[PubMed]
  1. Gaist D, Jeppesen U, Andersen M, García R, Hallas J, Sindrup S. Statins and risk of polyneuropathy: a case-control study. Neurology. 2002;58(9):1333-1337.[PubMed]
  1. Chong P, Boskovich A, Stevkovic N, Bartt R. Statin-associated peripheral neuropathy: review of the literature. Pharmacotherapy. 2004;24(9):1194-1203.[PubMed]
  1. Boger M, Hulgan T, Donofrio P, Peltier A. QSART for diagnosis of statin-associated polyneuropathy. Muscle Nerve. 2011;43(2):295-296.[PubMed]
  1. Lo Y, Leoh T, Loh L, Tan C. Statin therapy and small fibre neuropathy: a serial electrophysiological study. J Neurol Sci. 2003;208(1-2):105-108.[PubMed]
  1. Novak P, Pimentel D, Sundar B, Moonis M, Qin L, Novak V. Association of Statins with Sensory and Autonomic Ganglionopathy. Front Aging Neurosci. 2015;7:191.[PMC]

Related Articles

therapath2022-09-04T14:23:35-05:00

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CONTACT US

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Can statins cause permanent neuropathy?

Those who are on statins are 14 times more likely to develop peripheral neuropathy than those who don't. The longer the time on statins and the higher the dose increases the risk of developing peripheral neuropathy.

Which statins do not cause neuropathy?

Pitavastatin, pravastatin and rosuvastatin, all hydrophilic, exhibited no association or a lesser association with neuropathy. Peripheral neuropathy is a credible side-effect of statins.

Is peripheral neuropathy a side effect of statins?

Muscle diseases are the most common side-effects of statins, which could manifest ranging from mild muscle weakness to severe rhabdomyolysis (10, 12–14). Peripheral neuropathy is a probable side-effect of these drugs.

Is neuropathy from medication reversible?

Drug-Induced Peripheral Neuropathy (DIPN) occurs when a chemical substance causes damage to the peripheral nervous system [1]. DIPN is potentially irreversible, resulting in sensory deficits and paresthesia typically in a glove and stocking type distribution; motor involvement is rare.

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