PMR. Endocrine or Rheumatology Issue?
I’m beginning to have a sense that I need to be looking to support b my endocrine system in order to get past the rheumatologivical aspects of PMR. Steroids? cortisol? Adrenal gland? Seems very endocrine based to me. Any known research or guidance out there????
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@fearnomore24
Low dose naltrexone. It is usually prescribed at high dosage (50mg) so the low dose is only available at compounding pharmacies that can create the pills or capsules at the lower dosage. My dosage is only 3mg. LDN is an off label prescription.
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2 Reactions@kjoed53 that's interesting. Did the SMM diagnosis replace the PMR diagnosis? Is the idea that you no longer need to take Prednisone at all due to misdiagnosis? And is LND now the only medication you need? How did they ultimately decide it was SMM and not PMR?
Sorry for all the questions but the idea of other conditions presenting as PMR comes up often and seems to be one of the most difficult questions in an already difficult area.
@gmdb
Sorry for the long post, but it's a complicated situation. I have PMR but my rheumatologist did a very thorough blood workup and noticed some other markers that also needed evaluation. He sent me to a hematologist/oncologist who did more blood work, a PET scan and a bone marrow biopsy. All these tests were done while I was on the prednisone, which suppressed the numbers but they were still high enough to indicate SMM. I have both and from what I understand, it is not unusual for people with MGUS or SMM to also have PMR. Since the prednisone suppresses the SMM indicators, I need to be off prednisone to know my risk factor for MM. In a worse case scenario, I could already be in high risk SMM or even active MM. There's no way of knowing exactly how much the numbers are suppressed. My rheumatologist didn't want to prescribe kevzara until the hematologist/oncologist signed off on it because it can also affect some SMM markers. That's why I was put on LDN while I taper down on prednisone. Ironically, it looks like my hematologist oncologist has signed off on it today so I need to speak with my rheumatologist tomorrow. Just in time as I'm on 12.5mg due to go down to 10mg on Saturday and I'm feeling more pain and more fatigue over the last two days. I won't stop the taper though because PMR is painful but not the risk that MM is, and I have to know exactly what I'm up against.
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1 Reaction@kjoed53 thanks for taking the time. Very important information to have. I have certainly had some very odd things happen to my blood markers since PMR arrived and was very ill last year. I was about to be referred to a hematologist when they found everything quickly returning to normal after I stopped methotrexate. In the end it was all put down to methotrexate toxicity.
@gmdb
Sometimes the cure is worse than the disease. In my case, the PMR meds could have had fatal consequences if not for a knowledgeable, diligent and proactive rheumatologist referring me to a hematologist/oncologist to further evaluate what he already suspected.
Thankyou @kjoed53 for spelling out so clearly an example of a complicated/complex series of conditions you are trying to have diagnosed/deal with - including PMR. Something we all need to be alert to.