Rheumatoid Drs
I was diagnosed with PMR in August of 2023. My family doctor has been all I have seen about my disease. I was ok with her until I came on this support group and now realize I dont know much about the disease itself or about tapering off of the prednisone. In December I was diagnosed with severe osteoporosis. My Dr told me to start tapering off quicker . I have gone from 20 mg to 7.5 . She never told me at what rate to taper or that if I was having a hard time I could go back up for a bit and then try again. I think I need to see a specialist after seeing all your comments. I have only had blood work done the one time and don’t understand the numbers that people are posting. I feel I have done myself a disservice by not seeing a specialist. Do any of you just have your family physician treat you ?
Interested in more discussions like this? Go to the Polymyalgia Rheumatica (PMR) Support Group.
Is this doc an option?
Oh yes. Your points are important. Thank you for providing more clarification.
If you can see a Rheumatologist, go. Their knowledge is more specific to PMR as it is an autoimmune disease. They have more experience with steroids. My PA was reluctant to prescribe Prednisone, even when I told him it was keeping me relatively PAIN free and that I needed it. Once on 20mg a day, I felt almost well again. In 2 months, under the Rheumatologist's direction, I have tapered to 15mg. I see him tomorrow and plan on asking about tapering more.
Same info from a doctor in England, so happy to know that there is no permanent damage.
https://www.goodrx.com/health-topic/autoimmune/autoimmune-vs-autoinflammatory-disease
Thank you for the info on auto-inflammatory vs. auto-immune. I did more research.
Here is a table that addresses PMR in the spectrum of auto-inflammtory vs autoimmune . I will find the actual reference. -
--Floris A, Piga M, Cauli A, Salvarani C, Mathieu A. Polymyalgia rheumatica: an autoinflammatory disorder? RMD Open. 2018 Jun 4;4(1):e000694. doi: 10.1136/rmdopen-2018-000694. PMID: 29955386; PMCID: PMC6018871.
I don't think they really know what PMR is. Perhaps a combination of autoinflammatory and autoimmune.
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34798314/#:~:text=Background%20and%20aim%3A%20Polymyalgia%20rheumatica,partially%20understood%20immune%2Dmediated%20mechanisms.
My rheumatologist made a comment to me once that made me curious. I'm not sure what disorder he was referring to because I have several. We were discussing "immune system memory." His comment was, "my immune system was unlikely to forget what it has been attacking for so many years."
I googled "immune system memory and autoimmune disorders." I found the following:
"In an autoimmune response, when memory cells are formed against the “self,” they help mount a highly efficient pathogenic response against the body's own tissues. These memory cells, by virtue of being long lived also become very difficult to eliminate."
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4067599/#:~:text=In%20an%20autoimmune%20response%2C%20when,become%20very%20difficult%20to%20eliminate.
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PMR is supposed to "burn itself out" in a year or two which suggests more of an innate immune response. That clearly didn't happen in my case. The longer PMR persists, maybe it becomes an adaptive immune response.
I'm just glad an IL-6 inhibitor seems to stop my PMR symptoms. Unfortunately, my symptoms have returned whenever Actemra was stopped. This might explain why my rheumatologist has no plan to stop Actemra anytime soon. During our discussion about when to stop Actemra was when he made the "immune system memory" comment.
People with RA and other types of inflammatory arthritis don't ever have their biologics stopped unless the biologic stops working. That is usually when their immune systems form antibodies against the biologic.
Is this the reference you are referring to?
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6018871/
"In summary, despite the incomplete knowledge of PMR pathophysiology and the lack of validate discriminative criteria for polygenic autoinflammatory disorders (AIDs), current evidence suggests that PMR does not easily fit into any of the two pure ends in the spectrum of the immune-mediated disorders, but a greater affinity for AIDs seems to emerge."
Good research!! Well done! This helped me understand it better.
So much info out there!