PMR or Steroid Myopathy
PMR was the diagnosis for the debilitating muscle pain I was suffering, and prednisone was prescribed. I have been taking prednisone for almost two years. At the eighth month mark (5 or 10 MGS of prednisone) I began experiencing muscle pain. With every reduction of prednisone, the pain increased. The pain perfectly mimics the pain of PMR. My doctor at first said that I was experiencing referred pain from my joints. I knew that to not be the case. Several months later, I was told that the pain is from steroid myopathy.
I am currently on 4 MGS of prednisone for one month, then 3 MGS of prednisone for one month, 2 MGS of prednisone for 1 month, and then 1/2 MG of prednisone every-other-day for one month.
From February 2018 to July 2018, I was on 2.5 MGS of prednisone. The pain did not disappear. My dosage was steadily decreased to the point that I was taking .5 mg of prednisone per day in October 2018. The pain did not relent. In fact, it worsened. The dosage of prednisone was increased to 5 MG which did not affect the pain. So . . . the reduction in dosage began again.
It is my understanding that if the pain persists after I am off prednisone, then Methotrexate will be used to control the PMR. I have no problem with that. I have never enjoyed the side effects of prednisone. It is a necessary evil if one has PMR. In fact, I prefer to not be taking any medication. But . . . I do not want to become incapacitated which was the case when PMR was initially diagnosed.
How does one discriminate between the pain of PMR and Steroid Myopathy?
Interested in more discussions like this? Go to the Polymyalgia Rheumatica (PMR) Support Group.
@rachelp - I have been treated at Mayo Clinic in Jacksonville for Breast Cancer and Giant Cell Arteritis. It is a fantastic facility and a wonderful choice especially in the winter. I was diagnosed in their Emergency Room last May with GCA. A neurologist diagnosed me so I was taken care of in the Neurology Department. You will probably be seen in Rheumatology. We live in Orlando so we stay in Jacksonville when we have appointments. If you have any questions regarding hotels, I will be happy to tell you where we stay.
I have been diagnosed with steroid induced myopathy. I was on prednisone and a rejection drug for two years after an autoimmune disorder where my immune system played hell with my kidneys. I am off the drugs for well over a year and my kidneys are back to functioning normally now but I am left with something called steroid induced myopathy. My left leg and my left forearm have been the ones that suffer the biggest problems. I have never been advised of what to do to help myself or any type of doctor to ask for some help. I have read much on line on the subject and now feel where I am is where I’ll always be. So I was wondering if anyone else suffers the same problem. I do not suffer pain but my mobility sucks to say the least. I use walking sticks and a walker. I take aquatic exercise twice a week and try to walk out around as weather allows. Anyone can offer anymore.
Hi @beachbum80 and welcome to Connect. You may have noticed that I moved your post to this existed discussion about steroid induced myopathy so that you could see what others have said about this topic. Simply click VIEW & REPLY in your email notification to get to your post.
I wanted to tag fellow Connect members, @rachelp and @davidgold as they have experience with Steroid Myopathy and I also wanted to introduce you to @johnbishop as he may be able to provide support for you.
Back to you @beachbum80 that's great that you are trying your best to stay active. Have you asked your general practitioner for advice on what to do?
Hello @beachbum80 -- I would like to add my welcome to Connect along with @ethanmcconkey . Thank you for sharing. I've had two occurrences of polymyalgia rheumatica (PMR) and was on prednisone for the 3 years the first time and 1-1/2 years the second time. The drug can have some devasting side effects for some people. I'm glad that you were able to get off of the drug and your kidneys are back to functioning normally. I'm sorry you were left with steroid induced myopathy. While we wait for others to respond to your post it sounds like you are doing everything you can to help with the symptoms. I did find the following article which talks a little about steroid induced myopathy and the role of exercise in treatment.
When Steroids Melt Muscle
-- https://www.elitecme.com/resource-center/rehabilitation-therapy/when-steroids-melt-muscle/
Have your doctors suggested any other treatments or have you thought about getting a second opinion?
Hello John and thank you for your quick response. After reading the article you forwarded I now realize there maybe an answer to my shortness of breath,in that, my respiratory muscles may be affected by the myopathy. When the doctor sounds my chest it is always clear as a bell and my o/2 stats are are always excellent. I do pool exercise for an hour two to three times a week and hope this will help to keep me going. Your article also mentioned how resistant exercises may benefit myopathy. I will certainly give it a try! Once more thank you very much.
Be careful what you wish for! I do not have PMR, but have psoriatic arthritis and osteoarthritis, pretty severe according to x-rays. Knees are completely fused. I have been on IV therapy for auto immune disorders for 10 years and on prednisone for at least that long - different doses from 5 mg to 60mg depending on what’s wrong with me at the time. in the last five years the doctors have tried to wean me off - every time I got down to 5 mg I was in agony and in a walker or a wheelchair. The 10 mg kept me walking and traveling around the whole United States in a motorhome that I drove until suddenly this year in January I had trouble walking. I was in and out of four hospitals before I finally got MRIs taken and found out that the tendons in my legs are completely torn away from the bones, including the large hamstrings. I am now stuck with a walker and could be in a wheelchair within months and the doctors want me to go to a care facility and say I am unable to live independently. This is a known side effect of prednisone and is insidious until it is too late . So if you can try something else and if it works even halfway to what you expected the prednisone to do - go for it because otherwise, you may end up in a nursing home like I will.
Hello @chochosana, Welcome to Connect. Thank you for sharing your story on long term prednisone use. I'm not sure @rachelp will see your reply since she last posted in 2020. I'm sorry to hear you are now stuck with a walker and the potential of being in a wheelchair soon. My mother struggled with rheumatoid arthritis along with other conditions which left her in a similar situation but she was able to stay with my sister. It is a difficult situation to say the least and being your own advocate by learning more about treatments and options are what is needed.
Do you have any family close that can help you live independently?
Hi @chochosana I would just like to say that I can understand how you feel. I rated my health as excellent when I was diagnosed with reactive arthritis with uveitis at the age of 32. My first dose of prednisone worked its magic back then.
I was told that I was positive for HLA-B27 which wasn't such a big deal when I was tested. It was just a random bit of genetic information that didn't mean too much at the time.
https://www.mountsinai.org/health-library/tests/hla-b27-antigen
I'm now 68 years old and massive amounts of prednisone kept me going for about 35 years. Unfortunately, my medical problem list kept getting longer and longer during my years of taking prednisone. Premature cataract formation at the age of 35 was just a prelude for more things to come.
I might have done things differently knowing what I know now about prednisone. The pain was unrelenting sometimes and I didn't even know why things hurt so much. I don't know what was worse --- the autoimmune disease or the medication used to make the pain bearable.
I'm currently taking a biologic medication that my rheumatologist wanted me to try four years ago. It worked well for me and about a year later, I was off prednisone. My rheumatologist thinks I'm "better off" being on the biologic treatment as opposed to lifelong treatment with prednisone. I would agree with my rheumatologist's assessment because things appear to be heading in a better direction.
There has been a lot of damage done in the wake of this whole ordeal. I honestly don't know if the damage was caused by the autoimmune disease or the medication used to treat it. I tend to believe it was a combination of both.
Thank you John for your reply. I do have some assistance but I’m going to move next to them and get home health and try and stay somewhat independent. I’ll have a ramp built and I hopefully be able to stay on my own for a while longer. I was an RN for 20 years and so I do my research and will get into physical therapy once I get settled. I had to move a few hundred miles away and then go from hotel to apartment etc. until I can get my place fixed and change medical insurance and all my doctors etc. so there’s been a couple of months where I had to move around and my daughters been a big hel. if anybody has suggestions as to what I should do besides physical therapy that would be a big help. I have to see an endocrinologist as my adrenal gland, has shut down, so that’s going to be a few years of tapering off my prednisone , I’m still on 5 mg daily. O I will probably continue deteriorating at the same rate. I just found this website and I didn’t even know how to use it, so thank you for your suggestion about timeline.
My doctor is telling me 7.5 mg is so small of a dose not to be concerned. Thoughts??