New to PMR - Are Monthly Labs and Check-ups normal?
Hello, I am kind of new. 3 months with PMR but I am wondering how everyone is dealing with their doctors. So far my Rheumatologist is saying I need to see him once per month for labs and then check-up/medication recommendations (starting to taper). This will get very expensive with monthly doctor visits for what I understand will be YEARS of PMR. Is everyone doing this? or managing somehow on their own? But we need to the docs to write the prescriptions obviously.
Interested in more discussions like this? Go to the Polymyalgia Rheumatica (PMR) Support Group.
Why monthly visits? Is it for labs? I usually have my PC order labs about every 4 months to check on my inflammation levels. I have a new Rheumy who ordered labs to determine if I really have PMR. Her main certain for me was GCA. So far, no need for predisone. I pray it stays that way. I highly recommend aquatic therapy. That did it for me.
Strangely my labs show anemia as well. Were you given a reason for yours? I have also had a colonoscopy and pelvic ultrasounds which show nothing they can pinpoint. I was told to eat more iron rich foods.
It was very difficult to get my PMR under control- several flares. Only recently was able to decrease. Hopeful won’t have to go every month. When I started this journey she let me know I would be seeing her monthly until I got under control. Two months ago she added Kevzara to try snd get methylprednisolone dose lower. Very anxious to see her this month and see if the methylprednisolone can be lowered
Please read comment from Teri to me in this thread. She sent the note like yesterday or the day before. Since then I also found a reference to it in an Oxford Online Medical book. It's apparently real PMR can cause anemia in some people. I saw a slew of doctors, none knew. I even had bone marrow biopsy in addition to to what you mentioned plus about 25 blood tests for things like Lyme disease.
@pacarolyn Please ask your doctor to have a Ferritin panel run. I suspect you are not iron deficient. Careful about getting too much iron, it can be dangerous.
I had anemia, but it resolved when I started taking prednisone. It's sometimes called anemia of chronic inflammation. "Normocytic, normochromic anemia and thrombocytosis occur in approximately 50% of pateients with these disorders [PMR and GCA] and are excellent guides to the state of inflammation." Source – Cecil and Goldman's Textbook of Medicine.
I go into see my doctors "armed for bear." I don't take their heads off or anything like that but I'm ready to update them on my condition, my meds, etc. because I realized after seeing them a while that even the good ones rarely update themselves by reading charts before appointments.
Thank you. This was very helpful, Will discuss with my PC and Rheumy.
Thanks. Will do.
I hope all goes well. Decrease is what we all hope for. I will get labs this month as well. Hoping CRP and SED are lower.