Feelings when tapering: My journey
I have been taking Prednisone for 6 weeks now, started on 15mg and massive improvements once on 12.5, walking well, using light weights for training and just feeling brilliant. Started on 10mg last Monday and on the Wednesday I felt a little unwell, put it down to change in weather. My left shoulder started hurting more and by the Sunday I was aware my left hip was saying hello but of course this is nothing like the disabling pain I had at the start of all this. I did read somewhere that it can take a week for the body to get used to a reduction in Prednisone but I also have this feeling my body is just waiting for an excuse to flare up. Pretty sure if I phoned the Dr. a blood test would not show any reason to worry so am I just being paranoid. I also lost my appetite and had to force myself to eat and that is similar to when my PMR was at its worst. I use a tens machine on the shoulder so I can get on with dog walking etc. I guess I just want to know if this is something we have to get used to.
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This is all good information to know. In regards to adrenal insufficiency the following information about cortisol might be useful.
"Your body continuously monitors your cortisol levels to maintain steady levels (homeostasis). Higher-than-normal or lower-than-normal cortisol levels can be harmful to your health."
https://my.clevelandclinic.org/health/articles/22187-cortisol
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Prednisone replaces the cortisol the body naturally produces. As you can see cortisol regulates many things in addition to electrolyte and fluid management.
There is no way a daily dose of Prednisone is going to duplicate what cortisol and the HPA axis does. The HPA axis is a complex mechanism that the body has to regulate cortisol levels along with regulating inflammation. The entire system manages many bodily functions which directly impacts how we feel.
https://my.clevelandclinic.org/health/body/hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal-hpa-axis
Consider the effect of an anti inflammatory Mediterranean diet with gluten avoidance. I also rely on turmeric, vitamin D, statins and CoQ10 as immune
modulating supplements. I avoid non steroidals when on prednisone but consider topical diclofenac safe. Inquire about proactive measures like osteoporosis and cardiac risk screening if you need adequate steroid doses
long term. I always take prednisone with food and also calcium antacids at night. Symptom relief is not always correlated with lab results.
@tiateacake I moved your discussion to your original discussion on tapering so that members could see your thank you message, https://connect.mayoclinic.org/discussion/feelings-when-tapering/.
Hello @edwardh .
Thanks for your comments. I'm at 17 months now with PMR. Had one major flare last year in September. I've been down to 5mg/day now for almost two months per my doctors plan. Finally settling into the change. The plan now for me is to go down to 4mg/day alternating with 5mg/day. I guess I can understand the strategy; If it doesn't work I stay on 5mg as my lowest, effective dose? If it does work I can drop down to 4mg safely? I've developed a type of security blanket with the Prednisone because it has helped so much with my L4 L5 lower back issues.
we'll see how it goes. If I have to stay at 4mg or 5mg permanently it's ok with me.
Thanks to all of you who have provided such good info which has helped me navigate thru the nuances of PMR. Ernie
My daily log also includes exercise the day before, sleep, stress, unusual foods. There are many factors that contribute so it helps to look for patterns.
I was originally on 60mg of Prednisone for possible Giant Cell Arteritis. I found when I was weaning from 10 mg to 7.5 mg was when my pain started to return. However, I also found that the pain was due to the Prednisone withdrawal and NOT THE PMR. This was my weaning experience from 10 mg down to where I am now:
10 mg to 7.5 mg - a lot of pain - had to take 2 Advil - pain went away and never returned (speak to your doctor before taking Advil, may recommend Tylenol instead)
7.5 mg to 5 mg - severe pain - again took 2 Advil - same as above
5 mg to 4 mg - intermittent pain but eventually went away.
4 mg to 3 mg - Intermittent pain and some fatigue that did not go away
3 mg to 3 mg every other day and 2 in between - working out very well. Hardly notice any issues.
What was the time frame for all of this tapering. I took prednisone for 12 years for PMR. When I was finally able to discontinue prednisone, I had to stay on 3 mg for 6 months because my cortisol level was low. An endocrinologist said it "might be safe" to discontinue prednisone after my cortisol level improved.
I started the Prednisone at 60 mg in August, 2023 and still weaning to date. I have an appointment July 30th with my regular Rheumatologist. This Friday I have an appointment with my Rheumatologist at UPenn., Perelman Center.
This was my tapering process:
August 2023 - 60 mg
September - 40 mg
October - 30 mg
November - 25 mg
December - 20 mg
January - 15 mg
February - 10 mg
March - 7.5 mg
April - 5 mg
May - 4 mg
June - 3 mg
July - 3 mg every other day with 2 mg in between
August - Rheumatologist may take me down to 2 mg
So if my cortisol level returns to normal, than I may be able to stay off all medications for PMR?
You're doing great, Joan. That's an impressive reduction schedule. May things keep going well for you, fingers crossed.
Just wondering how long it took your cortisol level to improve. Like you, I just finished Prednisone a few weeks ago after 4 years. I don't have any symptoms of the PMR, no pain, but I am totally exhausted all the time. I'm wondering if it is Prednisone withdrawal. My rheumy said to take a low dose of Prednisone which might help with the exhaustion. I really don't want to do that. So I was wondering if you were given a time limit for the cortisol level to improve. It does get a little better each day, but still not back to normal.