European Journal of Internal Medicine
Volume 19, Issue 1 , Pages 8-14, January 2008

Statins in stroke prevention: What an internist should know

Received 27 October 2006; received in revised form 14 April 2007; accepted 7 May 2007. published online 26 September 2007.

Abstract 

Historically, the etiological link between hypercholesterolemia and stroke has been less clear than for coronary heart disease. The lack of association between cholesterol levels and stroke in most epidemiological and observational studies has brought about this controversy. Many recent, long-term clinical studies have confirmed that statin therapy results in a reduced risk of strokes, even in so-called “normocholesterolemic” patients. The magnitude of the effect is great. A large-scale analysis of more than 90,000 individuals showed that every 10% reduction in the concentration of LDL-cholesterol reduces the risk of stroke by 15.6%. The positive effect of statins on stroke depends mainly on LDL cholesterol reduction, but other non-lipid mechanisms, so-called “pleiotropic” effects, have been shown to play a role. This review seeks to summarize the role of statins in stroke prevention. Despite the fact that our understanding of the benefits of statins in stroke prevention is still evolving, we find marked room for improvement in stroke risk factor management. Internists must face this challenge and integrate this new knowledge into their daily clinical practice.

Keywords: Statins, Lipids, Stroke prevention, Pleiotropic effects

 

PII: S0953-6205(07)00245-2

doi:10.1016/j.ejim.2007.05.010

European Journal of Internal Medicine
Volume 19, Issue 1 , Pages 8-14, January 2008