pmg
Posted , 8 users are following.
I have experienced this condition for over 18 mnths now, and feel I would have been in a terrible situation if not for prednislone. It is managable with this drug and I think I am over the worst. Doctors are not much help as this is a grey area in medicine and at present time not that much is known, My wife and I diagnosed the condition and had to plead with the doctor for a blood test which showed the inflammetry markers confirming we were right and he was wrong. I finally stopped taking the pred and started to try ibprofen here and there. This worked for a while and then had pain at night again, but managed to cope with it. I have been self medicating for a month now taking one or two mil of pred. I am now coping and back to some light weight training as I was an athlete. I participated in olympic freestyle wrestling and weight training for many years, but do not think it had any bearing on the illness, as my mother had a history of reaumatic and arthritic complaints and I believe it to be handed down with the genes. I hope I have been some help to others in the same situation. Regards Peter Jeffery
0 likes, 12 replies
tina-uk_cwall peter46416
Posted
peter46416 tina-uk_cwall
Posted
ptolemy peter46416
Posted
peter46416 ptolemy
Posted
tina-uk_cwall peter46416
Posted
the steroids simply reduce the inflammation that causes the pain, how grateful are we all for that!!? Many patients consider preds to be evil because of their many side effects and some of them can be nasty. However, we will not all be subject to them if any and we have to realise that preds are the lesser of two evils because mass inflammation in the body is also extremely bad for you and there will come a time if you leave inflammation unchecked that we could be extremely ill if not life threatening.
reda the Bristol plan. It states the gold star treatment plan for this condition and then many of us once we get to 10mgs then follow the dead slow and almost stop reduction plan and only reduce our preds by .5 yes a slow way to reduce but from my experience essential.
you sound like a very dynamic man who prides himself in keeping his body well tuned and looked after, well, so was I and many many others of us on this site and when this debilitating condition attacks us we simply can't understand why. But we must approach our recovery with as much dedication as we looked after our bodies.
In my earlier days I played tennis for my county, I ran and swam and zumbaed and horse rode myself around, there was simply no stopping me. Now at only 54 I have had to calm right down and now I walk a lot and really enjoy it. Everything has its place in our lives and we must adjust to all that is thrown at us. Hopefully we will all recover one day and take up things where they were left off even if we restart these activities with less 'punch'. Regards, tina
EileenH peter46416
Posted
There are several people on the forums who have been perfectly happy on 1 or 2 mg and their doctors have insisted it can't be doing anything so they should stop taking it. Within a very short time they had a full blown flare - which once managed with a slightly higher dose then allowed them to go back to 1 or 2mg.
Juno-Irl-Dub tina-uk_cwall
Posted
molly1957 peter46416
Posted
best wishes molly
tina-uk_cwall molly1957
Posted
you have shown just how opinions regarding this condition differ because for your rheumatologist to think that it only takes 12-18 months for recovery is optimistic to say the least. It is more like 3 -5 years and that's why a slow taper of preds is vital.
if I may also advise you to look up he Bristol pmr plan. The treatment regime advocated in that paper is considered gold star treatment. I ask ypthis of you because your reduction from 15 to 10 after only 3 weeks is far to fast and too much of a drop. The normal is 15mgs for 6 weeks, 12.5mgs for 6 weeks then 10mgs for up to a year. (My rheumatologist had me on that dose for 6months. Then it's a very slow reduction using the dead slow and almost stop plan. Even with this reduction programme some of us reduce by only .5
please consider this tapering programme as it is less severe and with these programmes there is much less chance of a flare.
regards, tina
molly1957 tina-uk_cwall
Posted
regards molly
EileenH tina-uk_cwall
Posted
It is known that people with Scandinavian forebears are more likely to develop PMR and GCA. It is rarely (but not never) found in people from the African and Indian continents. Both those suggest a genetic component for susceptibility. It is fairly well accepted that there are likely to be multiple triggers that make the immune system finally go into over drive. If people from a similar regional backgound become partners - down the east cost of England for example, or from somewhere else in Minnesota, it is also very likely that they have a common genetic background. They are also subject to similar environmental triggers for 30-odd years prior to developing PMR.
He's also in cloud cuckoo land about 12-18 months. About a quarter of patients get off pred in under 2 years, remaining at a higher risk than others of a relapse at a later date. Half take from 4 to 6 years and the rest need pred longer term or even at a low dose for life. German text books say an average of 5 years and that certainly fits with the people I have met in the last 6 years on 3 different forums. My experience is also that doctors who trained in German-speaking countries are far less fixated on getting their patients off pred - you need what you need and for as long as you need it.
angela43016 peter46416
Posted