PMR and underlying cancer
Posted , 7 users are following.
my 77 year old father has had PMR for nearly 5 years and still takes 20 mg of prednisolone. Currently he is on 35 mg after a nasty fall and injury. I have read somewhere that resistant PMR can be a sign of an underlying malignancy. Appart from feeling unwel, poor walking and painful spasms in his hands and low back there dont seem to be any other clues. Any advice?
2 likes, 14 replies
bronwyn97278 gee013
Posted
EileenH gee013
Posted
Have you thought of trying Bowen therapy for the low back problems?
MrsO-UK_Surrey gee013
Posted
After what you describe as a "nasty fall and injury", I would hope that he has been referred for an MRI to see the extent of that injury and if any treatment, such as physio, would help, rather than increasing the steroid dose to 35mg. Doses as high as that and above are really reserved for those patients suffering from the linked condition, GCA - they are not necessary or recommended for those with PMR.
Is your father under a rheumatologist? if not, he should be. If he is under a GP, then he needs to see a diferent one. And, has he been referred to an orthopaedic consultant following his fall and injury? If it is a rheumatoligst who is treating him, he needs to find another one.
gee013
Posted
Oregonjohn-UK gee013
Posted
Rheumatology (BUPA) who works at the Princess Elizabeth Hospital in St Peter Port?
Oregonjohn-UK
Posted
bronwyn97278 gee013
Posted
MrsO-UK_Surrey gee013
Posted
I'm not surprised that you're not "very happy" with the circumstances. Neither would I be. If the rheumy is visiting the Island every couple of months thenwhy is he not seeing your father during those visits, not just leaving him to the rheumy nurse who is obviously not au fait with the need to get that long term very high steroid dose down or investigate him for something other than PMR. I do hope something can be resolved so that your father's health and quality of life improves.
gee013
Posted
EileenH gee013
Posted
I have just found an article from the Royal college of physicians of Australia which says: "Acute back pain, in the setting of constitutional symptoms and a markedly elevated ESR, prompts investigation for infection, such as discitis or a paravertebral abscess, as well as malignancy, such as myeloma or metastatic disease. Myeloma is one of the archetypal diseases associated with an elevated ESR."
That should have been looked for at the outset - maybe it wasn't and an assumption was made that since pred helped it was PMR. Of course, things can also change with time so maybe the current illness is not the same as it was at the beginning or what it was then was not severe enough to identify and then the pred covered up further symptoms. The fact that he couldn't reduce the pred dose should have triggered further investigation - that isn't typical of PMR and should have made them look further.
I'm sending you the link to the paper in a pm as I can't put it here without it disappearing for moderation.
gee013 EileenH
Posted
My father asked.
1. Is the anaemia due to the PMR?
2. Why is it two years since he ws last seen, when he ws initially told he would be seen annually?
Dr A refused to answer anything. He seems to be the only rheumatologist who visits Guernsey so there are no other options. Apparently hhe is not gifted with good commications skills or bedside manner. One outcome was he had a Ct scan abdo today and xrays of knees and ankles.......
EileenH gee013
Posted
bronwyn97278 gee013
Posted
gee013 bronwyn97278
Posted