Guest guest Posted January 5, 2003 Report Share Posted January 5, 2003 Brie, Sounds like Texas needs a good shaking. As far as your internist - there are medical books available and drug companies provide dosage recommendations, etc. It seems remarkable that your doctor would simply ask other patients what they are taking just to gauge your dosage. Aside from that. Don't know if weight/size makes a difference. But, my rheumy has described to me that 15 mg MTX is the 'standard' maintenance dose. She generally starts with 10mg because your body can and does have a reaction to it. If you have a reaction, she backs off to 5 mg. Then she keeps you at that dose for awhile - maybe 2 months? - before increasing it 5 mg at a time until your condition stabelizes or even improves. That's a weekly dose and it takes 6 weeks on one dose to tell how it is affecting you. I started on 10mg for 2 months and it had little effect. She raised it to 15 mg for another 2 months and had a slight effect. She raised it to 20mg and I had an amazing improvement, but I still had mini-flares. I was on 20mg for about 6 months and had a lingering flare so she raised it to 25mg. The literature states that 30mg can be given for arthritis, but only in the short-term. Even though after 4 months on 25mg, I was still having spotty difficulty, my doc preferred not to give 30mg because she felt the toxicity begins hitting more severely then. So, I have now been on 25mg for over a year and I have gradually improved. I still have an occasional mini-flare, but much less problematic than before. My doc has indicated that her goal is to eventually get me down to 15mg mainenance and she wants to lower my dose down to 20mg " soon " . But, she doesn't feel that I am truly stable enough to do this yet. Meaning, she is cautious about 25mg being a 'high' dose in her opinion and she has concerns about toxicity, but she feels that as long as my blood tests are ok, she prefers to keep symptoms under control. I now get blood tests every two months. At first, I got them weekly for the first 2 months, then monthly until I was on the 25 mg for about 4 months with no changes, so now I'm on bi-monthly. BRIEALLEN@... wrote: > Hi all: > Today I have a question for those on Enbrel and Methotrexate. How much -- kjg@... Canberra, ACT Australia Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 11, 2003 Report Share Posted January 11, 2003 Brie, How are you doing on the methotrexate? It made me itch all over. I am one of those in my 50's, and I feel 85. I was also put on Arava, and that didn't just make me itch, I got back my migraine headaches, and It went inside and made me bleed, get lung problems, etc. Now he wants to try enabrel, and I am very leery to have that injection put into me. I live alone, so if I go into shock or something, there is no one here to call 911. I do better on prednizone too, but the Doc says I've been on it too many times and too long. Also, I am afraid of what this meds jumping will finish off my last kidney, which is not doing well at all these days. What do you think? And what do all of you out there in the group think? I know that the prednizone helps the pain, and hasn't done much damage on the kidney. I need input, I go to that Doc next Tuesday-Jan 14th. Thanks! EFD Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 11, 2003 Report Share Posted January 11, 2003 In a message dated 1/11/03 4:38:06 PM, EFD1@... writes: << I do better on prednizone too, but the Doc says I've been on it too many times and too long >> How much were you taking and for how long? Pris Check out our ten step program for aggression in house pigs in our behaviorial book at http://valentinesperformingpigs.com/trainingbook.html Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 13, 2003 Report Share Posted January 13, 2003 According to my rheumy, Enbrel is safer than Arava. My rheumy won't prescribe Arava. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 13, 2003 Report Share Posted January 13, 2003 I had to be taken off Arava because it made my liver enzymes go nuts. I've been on Remmy for 8 months or so and I think it is starting to have adverse effects too...I get so tired of all this....And they can't get their heads straight as to info on the drugs--one says Enbrel and Remmy are equally safe.. One says no Enbrel is safer.. Another says Humira is safest of all.. another says no no Humira is just as dangerous as Enbrel.. AYYYYYYYYYYYYYYY!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! On Mon, 13 Jan 2003, , Janet wrote: > According to my rheumy, Enbrel is safer than Arava. My rheumy won't > prescribe Arava. > Liz ~~~ " I've learned that people will forget what you said, people will forget what you did, but people will never forget how you made them feel. " ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ EMAIL: juliette@... **ICQ 49746198** MSN & AIM LizKP1952** PERSONAL HOMEPAGE PAGE http://members.tripod.com/~LizK ADDult HOME PAGE: http://members.tripod.com/~LizK/addult.htm ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 14, 2003 Report Share Posted January 14, 2003 Liz, the drugs we have to take are not without side effects and they should not be given to us as " completely safe. " I can't think of one drug that is without some side effect or would be completely safe for everyone. I'm glad we have the freedom of choice, knowing that our doctors are weighing the benefits to our particular disease situation with all the side effects that the drug may bring. Having said that, I'm extremely thankful that I have the drugs I have to take for AS/IBD /iritis. This is why we have the FDA regulating all the drugs, why we have double blind studies...which include placebo, why we have followup...long term studies done, and why we have a huge 5 inch thick PDR (Physician's desk reference on all drugs) that shows the complete composition of the drug/the indications for use/the dosage/the side effects/the warnings/etc. Our pharmacist usually hands us a list of warnings and side effects so we can have some control in being watchful of any complication that might suddenly creep up. Most of our drugs have gone through rigorous years of testing. Some people complain about having to wait for testing and want the drug " now. " I take a more patient attitude (maybe too much) and even wait awhile after the drug comes into the market place to see and hear for myself. Many drugs have had to add other side effects to their list when 1000s of people are exposed to the new drug and some have had to be taken off market. At least, unlike alternative meds, we have this information up front. I want to make it clear...I'm not against alternatives...my husband and I have taken suppliments and herbs, but only when they have been double blind tested and approved for a certain aliment. My husband takes Saw Palmetto which has had double blind studies. There is an interesting article of double blind studies of menopausal herbs (someone mentioned this a few weeks ago) that should show how important studies are for alternative meds. We have to remember that most of our known drugs come from herbs...so herbs should be tested for their potency/effectiveness/and safety just like conventional meds. Best regards, Connie (granny) Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 14, 2003 Report Share Posted January 14, 2003 when i went to my rheummy last week and we were talking about prednisone he said that he found that prednisone didn't do much for reiter's syndrome and the associated inflammation. i had not heard that before and was wondering if anyone else had been told that or found that to be true. randy RS AS FMS Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 15, 2003 Report Share Posted January 15, 2003 In a message dated 1/15/03 12:23:35 PM, jturner@... writes: << Prednisone has transformed my life. It's not a good long-term solution, but it is an excellent stopgap >> Prednisone has enabled me to be almost pain-free for about three months, when usually I am in agony (from AS) . It also seems to give me energy...has anyone else noticed this? I asked my rheumie why is is still used some, and her answer is, " There is no better working anti-inflammatory " . Now I have to stop taking it and go on Remicade. I am so depresssed.... Pris Show Biz tricks for pigs! Awaken your pigs mind and give him challenges.... See our book at http://valentinesperformingpigs.com/trainingbook.html Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 15, 2003 Report Share Posted January 15, 2003 >when i went to my rheummy last week and we were talking about prednisone Randy--Like K's daughter, my son found that prednisone was the only thing that allowed him to keep functioning during a severe flare. He has been diagnosed with ReA and his knee and ankle were so painful he couldn't walk until the prednisone. But, then, his doctor also prescribed Arava (and it worked well--my son's now in remission). Obviously, there's some disagreement among rheumatologists about what to do. --bc Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 15, 2003 Report Share Posted January 15, 2003 That's baloney. Prednisone has transformed my life. It's not a good long-term solution, but it is an excellent stopgap until I can get on Enbrel. I would get a different rheummy. That doesn't even biologically make any sense to say that. Prednisone is a non-specific immune suppressant/anti-inflammatory. It's about the strongest anti-inflammatory you can take. It works at least short-term on any disease that is autoimmune in nature which reiter's syndrome definitely is. -----Original Message----- when i went to my rheummy last week and we were talking about prednisone he said that he found that prednisone didn't do much for reiter's syndrome and the associated inflammation. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 15, 2003 Report Share Posted January 15, 2003 But Remicade might work much better and be safer in the long run. Although Enbrel generally speaking has worked better for AS than Remicade. But, then every patient's situation is different. Good luck with the Remicade. Prednisone definitely increases my energy. When I first went on it I was a little too hyper. The day my doctor prescribed it, I couldn't get up on the examining table, could barely move my legs, couldn't lift my feet off the ground. I took 10 mg. all at once and by the next day, I was rearranging all the furniture in my apartment and moved a sofa all by myself across a room and turned it around. It scared my kitty cat. I'm trying to taper down to 3 mg. twice a day, but boy is it hard. I hope to get on Enbrel soon if the insurance company will approve it. I'll be interested to hear how the Remicade works for you. I hope it's a miracle drug. Janet Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 21, 2003 Report Share Posted January 21, 2003 hi randy , my rheumy put me on prednisone first thing , it was a godsend .. i went from almost wheelchair bound to walking freely and climbing stairs . the long term side fx of pred scare me but going back to how i was 6 months ago scares me even worse .............with this disease its all a trade off and not much of it is good news ..................... nancy Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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