Is Crestor Dangerous?
How Does Crestor Cause Harm?
Should Crestor Be Available For Sale?
What Are Crestor's Side Effects?
What Injuries Can Crestor Cause? Crestor & Myoglobinuria
What Is Rhabdomyolysis? Is There A Time Limit On Claims?
How Is Rhabdomyolysis Treated? How To Protect Your Crestor Claim
Crestor & Renal (Kidney) Failure What's Next If You Hire An Attorney?
We are investigating CRESTOR cases right now. If you have taken CRESTOR, and after starting the drug you were told you have Rhabdomyolysis, Renal Failure, Kidney Failure or Myoglobinuria, you may be entitled to participate in a legal claim against the makers of CRESTOR. We can help you. If you are taking CRESTOR and you have not been diagnosed with any of these serious health conditions, but you are suffering any of the symptoms discussed in the videos above, please contact your doctor immediately. Do that first. These conditions are extremely serious and they can progress rapidly. Timely treatment is critical.
To Learn More About Your Options And Rights:
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Question: Should Crestor Be On The Market?
Answer: We believe the answer is no. The FDA approved Crestor in 2003 and has allowed it to be prescribed and sold ever since, against the strong recommendation of the Public Citizens’ Health Research Group, which has presented strong evidence that Crestor is much more dangerous than other drugs in the same class (that is, other statin drugs that lower cholesterol, like Zocor and Lipitor), and that it was no more effective than those same drugs. More dangerous than its competitors, but no more effective. Despite repeated calls for Crestor’s removal over the years, the FDA still has not taken the action it should take, which is to just ban the drug, order it removed from pharmacy shelves across the country. Until that day comes when the drug is banned, and we believe it will, a large segment of the population is daily being exposed to serious, unnecessary risk.