You got it
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=RNE0t_gg_Rg I love the way it’s laid out in this clip
It’s not an argument. It’s a statement.
I don’t disagree with you. I made a true statement. I have seven children and likely pregnant with number eight. I stay home with them. It’s rewarding but it’s the hardest job and now we’re back to my statement- women run from it because it’s hard. I’m a military veteran. I’ve worked in veterinary medicine. This job is the hardest with the most demanding hours. Like I said.
Statins may also lower vitamin D, since cholesterol is required for its production in the skin, and may decrease selenium availability by reducing selenoprotein transport, weakening antioxidant defense. Additionally, they can reduce dolichols, which are needed for proper cell membrane and protein function, and may slightly affect carnitine and fat-soluble antioxidants like vitamin E. Together, these changes can contribute to the muscle weakness, fatigue, and mitochondrial stress sometimes seen with long-term statin use.
Statins can lead to myositis-like muscle inflammation by depleting coenzyme Q10 (CoQ10), a vital compound in mitochondrial energy production. Statins block the enzyme HMG-CoA reductase to lower cholesterol, but this also reduces CoQ10 synthesis since both share the same biochemical pathway. When CoQ10 levels drop, muscle cells produce less ATP and accumulate oxidative stress, leading to energy failure, fiber damage, and leakage of muscle enzymes such as creatine kinase. The resulting muscle injury can provoke an inflammatory response resembling myositis. In most cases, this is a metabolic or mitochondrial myopathy rather than a true autoimmune condition, though chronic damage may sometimes trigger immune-mediated statin-induced myositis in susceptible individuals.
Where could I read more about this because I had no idea