Duane Graveline  MD MPH
Former USAF  Flight Surgeon
Former NASA Astronaut
Retired Family  Doctor
Lipitor®  Thief of Memory
My personal introduction to the  incredible world of transient global amnesia (TGA) occurred six weeks after  Lipitor was started during my annual astronaut physical at 
My  cholesterol had been trending upwards for several years. All was well until six  weeks later, when my wife found me walking aimlessly about the yard after I  returned from my usual walk in the woods. I did not recognize her, and only  reluctantly accepted cookies & milk–but refused to go into my now  unfamiliar home.
I  “awoke” six hours later in the office of the examining Neurologist with a  diagnosis of transient global amnesia, cause unknown. An MRI performed several  days later was normal. Since Lipitor® was the only new medicine I was taking,  the doctor in me suspected a possible side effect of this drug. Despite the  arguments of the examining doctors that statin drugs just did not do this, I  stopped my Lipitor.
The  year passed uneventfully and soon it was time for my next astronaut physical.  NASA doctors joined in the chorus I had come to expect from physicians and  pharmacists during the preceding year–that statin drugs just did not do this!  
At their bidding I reluctantly restarted Lipitor at one-half the previous dose. Six weeks later I again descended into the black pit of amnesia–this time for twelve hours, and with a retrograde loss of memory back to my high school days.
During that terrible interval, when my entire adult life had been  eradicated, I had no awareness of my marriage or my four children; my medical  school days or my ten adventure-filled years as a USAF flight surgeon; my  selection as a NASA scientist-astronaut or my post-retirement decade as a writer  of medical fiction.
The names of my books were like the names of my children – gone from my mind as completely as if they had never happened. Fortunately (and typically for this obscure condition), my memory returned spontaneously and again I drove home listening to my wife’s amazing tale of how the day’s events had unfolded.
Transient global amnesia is the sudden inability to formulate  new memory (known as anterograde amnesia), combined with varying degrees of  retrograde memory loss–sometimes for decades into the  past.
Until recently, the most common triggering events for these abrupt and completely unheralded amnesia cases have been sudden vigorous exercise, sexual intercourse, emotional crises, cold water immersion, trauma (at times quite subtle), and cerebral angiography.
In  the past four years a new trigger agent has been added: The use of the stronger  statin drugs such as Lipitor, Zocor and Mevacor. TGA is but the tip of the  iceberg of the many other forms of statin-associated memory lapses reported from  distraught people. Far more common are symptoms of disorientation, confusion and  unusual forgetfulness. These lesser forms of memory impairment can be easily  missed in many individuals because, to a certain degree, they are the nature of  us all.
On 9 November 2001, Dr. Pfreiger of the Max Planck Society for the Advancement of Science announced to the world the identity of the elusive synaptogenic factor responsible for the development of synapses–the highly specialized contact sites between adjacent neurons in the brain.
Not surprisingly, at least  to specialists in the field, the synaptogenic factor was shown to be the  notorious substance cholesterol! The so-called glial cells of the brain (long  suspected of providing certain housekeeping functions) were shown to produce  their own supply of cholesterol for the specific purpose of providing nerve  cells with this vital synaptic component.
Since the lipoproteins that mediate cholesterol transport (including both LDL and HDL) are too large to pass through the blood-brain barrier, the brain cannot tap into the blood’s cholesterol supply. Rather the brain must depend upon its own cholesterol synthesis–which the glial cells provide. The highly lipophilic statin drugs can easily cross the blood/brain barrier and thus directly interfere with glial cell synthesis of cholesterol.
The following are but a small sample of the hundreds of  reports I have received from distraught people having experienced the cognitive  side effects of Lipitor. 
1) I am 64  years old, exercise regularly and just retired this spring from teaching  nursing. I experienced 8-10 hours of short-term memory loss last weekend. I had  an MRI and echocardiogram, electrolytes, etc (all normal) and the neurologist  diagnosed the episode as TGA. My witnesses say that I had about a 30 second  memory and some retrograde loss extending back about 3 weeks. I now have my  memory back except for about 10 hours on Saturday the 10th. I’ve been taking  Lipitor for over a year and am currently on 10 mg. I believe that I will now  stop, having just learned of this possible cause  today.
2) How can I  obtain more information in regard to Lipitor’s cognitive side effects? I noticed  that my husband became forgetful while on 10mg. He is now on 20mg and I have  noticed increased forgetfulness and I think some confusion and irritability. He  is 60 years old and works full time as an educator. I can’t convince him that  Lipitor may be a problem. I did read a brief article a while ago that mentioned  forgetfulness could be related to Lipitor. Any information you have would be  greatly appreciated. I am a registered nurse.
3) I just read your web page about Lipitor. My husband has been on Lipitor for a few years now and I am really worried about him. He is a heavy duty equipment mech and has always worked on cars and trucks and equipment. He has been having memory problems and stress/depression for over a year now. When I brought this to his Dr’s attention, she put him on Lexapro (not sure of the spelling) and said it was depression that is causing his memory problems. After taking this for almost a year and having his confusion still getting worse he quit taking it.
He is still on the Lipitor. My next search lead me to having his  hormones tested as I have found that low hormones including DHEA can cause  memory problems also. He just had his blood drawn today for that. I was looking  online and found your information on Lipitor. My husband’s cholesterol is  genetic and cannot be lowered by diet and exercise. How do we find out if it is  the Lipitor that is causing his memory problems? He takes things apart and does  not remember how they go back together, and when doing a small project around  the house, I have to tell him how to do it. He was never like this before and we  are really worried about it. He is afraid of loosing his job because it is  taking him way too long trying to fix things that he use to be able to do in no  time at all. 
4) I just  happened upon your information as I was again researching TGAs. I live in  
5) My father  was rushed to the hospital last night after starting Lipitor three weeks ago and  has lost about 12 hours of his memory. He is 78 and basically in perfect health.  I have read your web site and am wondering if there is any further information.  
6) I don’t  know if it’s a coincidence or not, but my doctor just increased my Lipitor  dosage from 5 mg a day to 10 mg a week ago. Since then I feel like I have been  in a fog, unable to concentrate, and can’t recall some words that I wanted to  use when speaking. I found your email through a web search on the side effects  of Lipitor.
7) I am 58 years old and started taking Lipitor about 9 months ago at a relatively low dose -10mg. Not connecting any of the following to the Lipitor, I began to lose concentration, become forgetful, and in general feel like I was in a fog at times. My coordination seemed off, I stumbled more than usual and when driving the car I found the car tended to drift toward the center lane, which I had never experienced before. I initially assigned these things to stresses and aging or wondering about a brain tumor.
I finally consulted my doctor as  I also needed a follow up appointment to see how my cholesterol was doing. In  fact my cholesterol did go down markedly, but when I raised the issues with my  doctor he said he had encountered a couple of similar situations with other  patients on Lipitor. I took his advice to discontinue the Lipitor and after a  week I don’t notice any change yet. I am still of course wondering if the  Lipitor was a contributing or primary cause to these problems, and will be  interested to talk to my doctor again in 6 weeks.
8) I have just  been reading your online article on Lipitor and TGA Yesterday I apparently  became confused while with my husband at home, and spent several hours in a  local hospital ER; all tests (blood work and CT scan) showed no abnormality.  Stroke and aneurysm were ruled out and the diagnosis of TGA was made. I was  discharged home with the expectation that my memory would be back within 24 to  48 hours. I had never heard of TGA until last night (my earliest returning  memory was yesterday evening). After a fitful night’s sleep, I think that my  memory is back. 
9) Whilst researching TGA on the internet, hoping for some answers, I came across your article which is of particular interest to me since I have been taking Lipitor for several years – possibly three? It was prescribed by my GP following discovery of a slight occlusion in one of my carotid arteries (less than 15%). Repeat testing a year later showed no occlusion. In your experience it seems that you suffered the TGA quite soon after taking the Lipitor, whilst in mine, it has been several years with no problems.
Coincidence? Or Lipitor?  Obviously this is day one following the TGA and I am nervous, trying to come to  terms with what happened; I am ‘missing’ conversations that I apparently had  with my daughter in 
10) I would  like to let you know that since my husband has been taking Lipitor 20mg He has  become very nasty at times and lately I have noticed that his memory seems to be  failing him and when driving he has completely forgotten where he was going This  man has always been a very mild mannered easy to get along with and a totally  wonderful person. He is 70 yrs old and is waiting for back surgery, which I was  blaming his behavior on. He also has diabetes. I am going to contact our Dr. to  see what the risks are if he stops taking this  medication.
11.) I have  spent a lot of time with Doctors to determine what was wrong with me including a  MRI that showed my brain has shrunk since starting Lipitor. I have had every  battery of blood work to rule out other diseases. I just had a DNA test for the  
I am only 54 years old and used to write software  specifications and hold a patent in artificial  intelligence.
Duane Graveline MD  MPH
Former USAF Flight  Surgeon
Former NASA Astronaut
Retired Family  Doctor
Lipitor Side  Effects
Lipitor Cognitive Side Effect  Concerns
Lipitor and Transient Global  Amnesia
Lipitor Amnesia and  Medwatch
