Medications for Temporal Arteritis/Giant Cell Arteritis (GCA)
Anyone out there who has been diagnosed with Temperol Arteritis (Giant Cell Arteritis). I am undergoing testing and most likely have it. Would like to know how anyone is doing with it and what type of medications they use and any side effects, etc.
Interested in more discussions like this? Go to the Polymyalgia Rheumatica (PMR) Support Group.
Yes.
Hi Kanaaz, I am happy to share the following information. Thanks for bringing this question to my attention.
@peach414144, I am a organ recipient. I want to send a very sincere thank you for your interest in organ donation. Glad to hear you are thinking about about living donation!
Be sure to check out the living donor toolkit and the recipient toolkit for resources and information that may be helpful to you.
https://connect.mayoclinic.org/page/transplant/tab/resource-36/
https://connect.mayoclinic.org/page/transplant/tab/resource-35/
I have not seen any definite cut off age for a living kidney donor. A donor’s eligibility requires a medical exam, because the health of the donor must be considered first.
Rosemary
@ Can I, an 80 year old lady with stage 3 kidney diagnosis (which I am told is normal for an 80 year old): donate one of my kidneys (if it is a match) to a younger friend of mine 25 years younger? Or, wpuld my age prevent this (unless I am dead).
My doctor at Mayo told me that they are looking at the Shingles vaccine and how it plays into GCA. He told me the people that get GCA and have had a Shingles Vaccine do better than the ones that did not get the Shingles Vaccine. Were are you in the tapering?
Hi, Tinkerbell,
I actually had the original Shingles Vaccine when I turned 60 years old (nine years ago) and also had all of the Hepatitis Vacines at that same time just to err on the side of safety. I keep up with every immunization out there. I did contemplate taking the newer Shingles vaccination (Shingrix) but found out it was not yet covered by Medicare and it is quite expensive and also there are a number of people wondering how it will react to in their own systems. This is an excerpt from the Consumer Reports Organization. (https://www.consumerreports.org/shingles-vaccine/new-shingles-vaccine-shingrix-what-you-should-know) regarding the new Shingrix Vaccination and how it effects people who are on Prednisone and/or have auto immune situations:
"Right now, Shingrix is not recommended for older adults who are immunocompromised or are taking moderate to high doses of drugs that suppress the immune system.
But because the new shingles vaccine contains a nonliving viral particle, it may ultimately be deemed appropriate for those with compromised immunity. (Zostavax contains live—although weakened—herpes zoster virus, so those with significantly weakened immune systems should not receive it.) The ACIP will review data on Shingrix in these groups as it becomes available.
“Shingles is a big problem with immunocompromised people,” Schaffner says."
So I hope this helps in answering your questions regarding the new Shingrx Vaccine.
Still hopeful my rash/itch will one day soon be gone.
I got sidetracked to lots of discussions other than Temporal Arteritis, and am happy to finally be back where I belong.
I was diagnosed with GCA three months after you. I started with 40 mg Prednisone and now down to 10 mg. Three weeks ago started going to Rheumatologist who added Methotrexate to see if it would relieve my rash/itch. Is the adrenal gland function somehow related to GCA?
I was an active 81 year old when my three classic temporal arteritis symptoms presented—mild re-occurring headache in right temple and forehead, sore to the touch, the final symptom that got my attention enough to call my doctor for an appointment ASAP, was my jaw so painful it was hard to chew my cereal. Only had symptoms 2-3 weeks before calling and getting in the next day after describing my symptoms. After reading the shares on mayoclinic.org, I’m grateful my Dr diagnosed pronto, ordered me to start 40 mg Prednisone in morning, and subsequently confirmed with biopsy.
Hi @captainkenny, I have no medical training or background but did find a paper on National Institutes of Health site that infers the adrenal gland function is not related to GCA under the Results section of the abstract.
Hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenocortical axis function in patients with polymyalgia rheumatica and giant cell arteritis.
-- https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/12621591
John