Such side effects are rare, but perhaps medical professionals should run more tests when patients are initially put on these meds. I've been on 40mg of Lipitor since Feb 2007 with no issues at all. Who knows the real long term effects though, but in the meantime they are keeping cholesterol and inflammation to a minimum, something I'm glad of.
My mother had this side effect with two different statins. The third statin that her doctor tried her on did not have this side effect, but it did not lower her cholesterol, either. After that, she gave up on statins. My sister had this same side effect on a statin. Having been forewarned by our mother, my sister stopped the drug very shortly after getting the muscle pain. My sister was only willing to try one statin drug.
After my mother's and sister's experiences, I refused to try a statin, which my doctor found very hard to understand. (I found it hard to understand why he found it hard to understand.) Since then, I am having some better cholesterol results from losing weight and eating healthier food.
I'm hearing from other people who have been through this experience with statins that,even after stopping the drug, it can take weeks or months for the symptoms to go away. Maybe that has a lot to do with how long a person was on the medication. My mother took statins for a total of three or four years, and her symptoms have never totally remitted. My sister only took her statin prescription for about a week, and her symptoms remitted within about a week after stopping it.
In fairness, I should say that my mother does have some genuine arthritis, and certainly that contributes to her pain, also. At present, she still hurts, but she does not hurt like she did when she was taking statins. It's impossible to know how much of my mother's current pain is from her arthritis and how much is a permanent residual of her statin experience.
I don't personally believe that this side effect is rare. It might be uncommon, in the sense that it is "not the norm," but I have heard from too many people who had muscle and joint pain as a side effect of statins to think that it is truly rare. Maybe genetics has something to do with it, since my mother and sister both had this. Perhaps it is uncommon in the general population but common among the family members of someone who has already experienced it.
I have been on lipitor for nearly two years. During this time there has been a very slow but consistant decline in my well being. It have got to the point that I could not walk more the 300 meters and was on pain killers just to get through the day. I was cronically tired and was progressively mentally less sharp. My feet hurt and my hands and neck hert it has go to the point that I have had to give up my job. All the time I was going to my doctor and giving the symptoms to him. He insisted that I had arthritis Finally a friend suggested that I look up the side effects of lipitor on the net. It was all there and I had more than half of the symptoms on the list, severly. I have since taken my self off lipitor and have been off it now for ten weeks. I am much better but still not totally back to normal. This is potentially and dangerous drug. Beware of it and make sure that you have a good doctor. I have since changed mine. I am now looking at alternative methods to control colesterol.
Lipitor comes with a leaflet which explains the medication. It explains how it works, how
to take it, when to take it and the side effects. I believe it mentions that one side effect
which is rare, degenerates muscle tissue and this causes permanent damage.
I'm not sure if this is the case with your husband, but surely your Dr can let him stop
taking Lipitor for a week or so to see if he recovers. Cholesterol levels do not rise or
lower swiftly. If I drink a pint of fatty milk today, my cholesterol level wont suddenly shoot up tomorrow, it takes several days of that diet to have an effect.