Guest guest Posted January 4, 2007 Report Share Posted January 4, 2007 Kathy- Could be the mtx. My daughter's inflammation disappeared seemingly overnight after she'd been on mtx for 6 weeks. It has never come back. Generally, I believe the idea is to continue the mtx for at least one year after no symptoms have been seen. Re her skipping doses and having no symptoms . . . mtx builds up in the system, so one missed dose wouldn't necessary be expected to produce inflammation. I wouldn't yank her off of it too soon. . . especially if she's having no problems with it. Why jinx it? Best of luck, (Diane, 7, pauci in remission, iritis) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 4, 2007 Report Share Posted January 4, 2007 Diane, Thanks, that is exactly the kind of information I was looking for. You're right about stopping the meds, thought....I definitely don't want to jinx this! Congrats on your daughter's remission! Kathy dbornscheu@... wrote: Kathy- Could be the mtx. My daughter's inflammation disappeared seemingly overnight after she'd been on mtx for 6 weeks. It has never come back. Generally, I believe the idea is to continue the mtx for at least one year after no symptoms have been seen. Re her skipping doses and having no symptoms . . . mtx builds up in the system, so one missed dose wouldn't necessary be expected to produce inflammation. I wouldn't yank her off of it too soon. . . especially if she's having no problems with it. Why jinx it? Best of luck, (Diane, 7, pauci in remission, iritis) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 5, 2007 Report Share Posted January 5, 2007 Kathy, Reading your post was just like seeing my very own words and thought process related to Aundrea. We went through a very similar thing with Aundrea. She started methotrexate and within a few months she was doing awesome. It was like you had no clue that she even had arthritis. Naturally, we thought the same thing as you. Could the arthritis have been a temporairy thing related to a virus. Maybe she had outgrown it. When we questioned the doc about it, he said you never really know if the medicine is making the difference of if she could come off of it successfully unless you make the attempt. I read lots of literature and studies on when to discontinue mtx and there was no set schedule. Some docs give it a year without any symptoms and then take the patients off cold turkey. Others begin the slow process of weaning them off over several months. There was no data to indicate that one method of withdrawl was better over the other. The one thing I did see was that in most of the studies that I read there was a 50% likelihood that the arthirtis would resurface within one year of withdrawl from methotrexate. Determining who would be in that 50% was also not clear, although those that had suffered longer with jra and took longer to achieve control did have a higher chance of flaring again. So we took the plunge with Aundrea and took her off mtx last December. We opted to do the weaning and decreased it over a 3 month period. Everything was great for 4 months. We thought she had indeed " outgrown " jra. In April things began to resurface. Stiff joints in the mornings and then later painful joints, fatigue etc.. By July she was having daily pain and we restarted the mtx. According to the studies most kids that had had good results with mtx. could restart it and expect to again have good control with the drug. For Aundrea she hasn't done as well as she did when she first started mtx. We have had to increase the dose and still there remains joint pain. She has missed more school this year than ever before. Around 6 weeks. She is now going to school half time with a homebound tutor. We are waiting to see a pedi rheumy for a consultation to determine what course of treatment we need to pursue for her. I guess in the end you just never know how your child will do once you take them off the meds. But, from my experience I would have to suggest that as long as she is doing so well and having few adverse affects, I would encourage you to just stay the course. I believe in time there will be more studies that will give a better direction as to how long to maintain treatment with a course of medication and when and how that med should be withdrawn. Sorry, for the long disertation but I feel as if I have walked in your shoes and I wanted to share with you what our experience was with the decision to discontinue treatment of mtx and then the struggles that we have faced since restarting it. Blessings, (aundrea 11 systemic jra/gerd)- -- In , Momof2gr8kids <sk8ingmomof2@...> wrote: > > Hi everyone. I hope you all had a wonderful holiday season. Our family has had a VERY busy couple of months, and to be honest, I haven't had much of a chance until now to even read list messages, let alone post. > > has been taking weekly Methotrexate injections since right after the JRA conference in July. Thank the Lord, she has not had one flare since. I've been waiting for the ball to drop....but so far it has not. We have even had a few weeks where we missed the injection (just forgetting...not intentional) and we haven't seen any adverse effects. The last visit in November, her rheumy said he didn't need to see her for 4 months. I am grateful for any amount of time we are given flare-free, but all of this has made both my husband and me question whether perhaps the arthritis was a temporary thing (response to her vaccination, a virus, ??). It just seems almost unbelievable to me that she'd respond so well so quickly. The only swelling left is in a few of her fingers, which were the first to show the signs. I don't want to be in denial, but I also don't want to be taking meds unnecessarily. Has anyone here heard of this happening (temporary arthritis), > or am I just being too hopeful and the MTX is doing that good of a job for her? The change has just been so drastic...she could barely walk at the JRA conference, and afterward she was rolling to get from place to place, and now....she walks on her tip toes and jumps, climbs and runs like nobody's business. > > I asked the rheumy last time when we would say she is in remission, or how they know when to cut back on the meds and really didn't get a firm answer. I would love to hear any insight anyone might have.....positive or otherwise... > > Thanks, > Kathy > mom to , 2, poly > and Luke, 5 next week! > > > > --------------------------------- > Want to start your own business? Learn how on Small Business. > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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