Polymyalgia Rheumatica (PMR): Meet others & Share Your Story
Welcome to the Polymyalgia Rheumatica (PMR) group on Mayo Clinic Connect.
Meet other members who are dealing with PMR. Let’s learn from each other and share stories about living well with PMR, coping with the challenges and offering tips.We look forward to welcoming you and introducing you to other members. Feel free to browse the topics or start a new one.
Grab a cup of coffee or beverage of choice and let’s chat. Why not start by introducing yourself? What's your experience with PMR? How are you doing today?
Interested in more discussions like this? Go to the Polymyalgia Rheumatica (PMR) Support Group.
Hello@ronschultz please start keeping a pain journal - i divide the day into 3 parts 6am to 2 pm , 2pm to 10pm and 10pm .sleep till waking. Because i was doing this for a tweaked knee in February ( Zumba!) through PT sessions i know exactly when and how severe was the Bilateral Pain i experienced in all four limbs! google "gel phenomenon" and PMR -- this is the word i am using. Hang in there !
wow - i feel startled by your comment re: Actemra. A quick google search re: biologicals for PMR shows the site for KEVZARA and the recent FDA approval "To treat adult patients with polymyalgia rheumatica (PMR) who have had an inadequate response to corticosteroids or who cannot tolerate corticosteroid taper." i am only searching out new literature and reviews about PMR ( post 2018) The Am Coll Rheumatologists ( ARC) guidelines were published in 2015. this title from Feb 2023 is easy to read : "Treat-to-target recommendations in giant cell arteritis and polymyalgia rheumatica". Christian Dejaco - first author. PS>My doctors are at Mass General and that was one of the sites for the clinical trial for Kevzara in PMR>
I take Actemra for the treatment of PMR.
Actemra is FDA approved for the treatment of GCA. My rheumatologist thought Actemra should work for PMR too.
Kevzara was recently approved by the FDA for the treatment of PMR.
Actemra and Kevzara belong to the same classification of medications. They are both IL-6 receptor blockers. The IL-6 inflammation pathway is implicated in both PMR and GCA.
For anyone looking for more conversations on Kevzara, here are a few more discussions:
--- Has anyone heard this news about Kevzara approved for PMR?: https://connect.mayoclinic.org/discussion/has-anyone-heard-this-news-about-kevzara-approved-for-pmr/
--- PMR & Kevzara: https://connect.mayoclinic.org/discussion/pmr-kevzara/
--- Kevzara (sarilumab) to treat PMR: https://connect.mayoclinic.org/discussion/kevzara-sarilumab-to-treat-pmr/
Hi. Just diagnosed, started on 15mg once daily, today was first dose. I’m concerned about blood pressure increase and weight gain. I have Hashimoto’s thyroiditis as well so my weight likes to stick to me! Any tips? Experiences from others? Thanks!
Hi @vjs, My PMR is currently in remission. I had a terrible problem with weight gain the first time around so when it came back the second time I decided to eat healthier and exercise more which really helped. The following article has some good suggestions that might be helpful:
--- Polymyalgia Rheumatica Diet: Do's and Don'ts: https://www.healthline.com/health/polymyalgia-rheumatica-diet
I am 68 and have been dealing with PMR diagnosis for going on four years. It started in late 2019 with the usual aches and pains, inability to pick things up, sore neck, shoulders, arms, and back of my thighs. I had no idea what to think, so I went to the ortho doc, thinking maybe pinched nerve? He alertly recognized that it was not a mechanical issue, because his father had PMR and he recognized the symptoms. He sent me back to my GP and advised to run the blood tests and try Prednisone. None of the blood markers for inflammation were evident, however a starting does of 20 mg. of Prednisone had me almost completely out of pain in a matter of days, so the presumption is PMR, or at least an autoimmune condition. I also have had reynaud's for many years, and five years ago starting noticing weird a weird lump at the tip of my left ring finger, which turned out to be a calcium deposit. I had that removed in 2021, but it came back and I had a second surgery on the same finger this year. I have bad arthritis in both thumb joints as well, which they think is just garden variety aging.
Anyway, I proceded a bumpy path down the taper, going off completely once and having to bump back up to 4 mg due to pain. This month I went completely off after a couple months at .5 mg every other day, all the while living with a moderate level of pain that others might not tolerate (just want to be off the "stuff"). I have been off for maybe a week and a half, and it's not going that well, so may have to bite the bullet and go back on something. I am completely fatigued, sleep disrupted, and my brain is a bit foggy. I am active... walk regularly, and on my feet most of the day, coffee drinker, moderate alcohol, decent diet, and have always viewed myself as basically "healthy," so it has been difficult for me to accept that I may not get better. I am interested to read about alternative treatments, but I seem to have no visible side effects from the Prednisone (other than the likely invisible ones like bone loss). I got lined out with a Rheumatologist in Seattle in 2020 as we don't have many specialists where I live, and she has been monitoring my Prednisone, and I go to a Hand clinic there for the calcinosis, but they all seem a bit baffled with me. The hand doctor keeps wanting to suggest Crest syndrome, but all of my blood stuff is normal (except the usual age-related med-high cholesterol and inherited hypertension, both under control with meds). The Rheumatologist reassures me that even 3 mg is nearly a placebo dose, but I am still leery. So I am grateful for this forum and the opportunity to read about other folks' experiences down this very weird road.
Welcome @amak23, It can be a struggle tapering off of prednisone while trying to get into remission. My first bout with PMR took me 3 and half years to taper off and it stayed gone for 6 years. The second time I had learned to change my lifestyle some with healthier eating and a little more exercise to control the stiffness and I was able to taper off in 1 and half years. It's been in remission for almost 5 years now.
Do you keep a daily log with your dosage and level of pain when you first get up in the morning?
Hi, thank you for the nice response! I keep a log of my dosage, but not of pain. Mornings are definitely the worst, and that is a good idea. I will start noting it. I dream of remission!!
Thanks John, congrats on remission!