Mednet Logo
HomeRheumatologyQuestion

At what point do you consider a patient to have relapsing PMR?

2
4 Answers
Mednet Member
Mednet Member
Rheumatology · Harvard Medical School

Relapses in PMR are quite common. It is not unusual for patients to do well initially and as steroids are tapered, they start to describe a recurrence of symptoms. My concern is when these relapses occur early. For example, if they are noted as a patient tapers down from 10 mg towards 5 mg/day and r...

Register or Sign In to see full answer

Mednet Member
Mednet Member
Rheumatology · U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs

I would be very cautious calling PMR relapse without the rise of ESR/CRP. More likely, the patient is feeling the pain of OA return with steroid taper IMO. Remember, Pred treats all pain non-inflammatory arthritis, and inflammatory arthritis. If the patient has even a small bump with classic PMR, it...

Register or Sign In to see full answer

Mednet Member
Mednet Member
Rheumatology · University of Michigan

My approach is similar to Dr. @Dr. First Last's with some additional insights. I often advise patients on prednisone alone, without an anti-IL6 drug (which I believe can shorten PMR's clinical course), that the speed of their corticosteroid tapering is largely predetermined. Our job is to figure out...

Register or Sign In to see full answer

Mednet Member
Mednet Member
Rheumatology · Hospital for Special Surgery

I would define a clinical relapse as recurrent signs/symptoms of PMR once remission has been achieved. A supporting rise in inflammatory markers is helpful but not necessary to define relapse; similarly, improvement of symptoms with increased glucocorticoid dose also suggests a relapse. There is no ...

Register or Sign In to see full answer

At what point do you consider a patient to have relapsing PMR? | Mednet