Dr. I | N+Years
676 posts

Dr. I | N+Years
@nplusyears
Family doctor (MD). In the trenches of care, filtering hype from longevity science. Follow for evidence-based prevention & longevity insights.


Statin drugs (cholesterol lowering medications) have been shown to increase insulin resistance and diabetes (PMID: 34433928, 36965747, 29081977), which is one of the biggest risk factors for developing plaque. Further, research has shown that those who take statins have increased amounts of calcified plaque compared to those who don't take statins (PMID: 25655639, 22875226, 17909945, 16449511). It's crazy that our medical system wants to lower LDL, which does not cause heart disease, with a drug that actually increases your chance of getting heart disease. The worst part is the measuring and micromanaging cholesterol levels has been a big distraction from the actual causes of heart disease, which gives people a false sense of security. A study found that 75% of people who had a heart attack had normal to optimal cholesterol levels (doi.org/10.1016/j.ahj.…) If you want to learn the actual causes of heart disease and heart attacks and how to prevent them, click the link below to learn more about my heart health mentoship program. stephenbhussey.com/register



In adults ≥60 years, 26% discontinued levothyroxine while maintaining thyroid function, with 64% success for doses ≤50 μg/d, and no clinically important changes in thyroid-related symptoms. 🧵 ja.ma/41TS48I










🩺 We used to call BP 130–139/80–89 "prehypertension." ⚠️ We stopped — because the label implied it wasn't yet a problem worth treating. It was renamed it Stage 1 hypertension precisely to signal that action was warranted. 📊 That "pre" state carries a 38% higher CV event risk (HR 1.38) vs normal BP. 🔄 Now consider "preclinical obesity" as defined by the Lancet Commission — excess adiposity without overt organ dysfunction. 📈 In NIH's All of Us cohort (200,000+ US adults), preclinical obesity carries a 40% higher hazard for CV events (HR 1.40) vs individuals without obesity and without dysfunction. 🤔 Nearly identical excess risk. Yet the "preclinical" label risks sending the opposite message — that this isn't a condition requiring treatment. 💡 Terminology shapes clinical action. And coverage decisions follow diagnoses. See our article for more: 🔗academic.oup.com/jcem/advance-a…






My patient would rather take a peptide than a statin. That reveals an uncomfortable truth in medicine statnews.com/2026/04/03/pep… via @statnews









Statin Therapy for Primary Prevention and Clinical Outcomes in Adults Aged 80 and Older. #geriatrics agsjournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/jg…





