by Kathy » Sat Apr 29, 2006 4:49 pm
Subject: Polymyalgia Rheumatica and temporal arteritis
Your article in this months newsletter really rang a bell. I think I had written you previously about my husband's bout with the statin drugs and how he went to the post office and had a hard time finding his way back home. It was a trip of 5 whole blocks. Needless to say, despite the Doctor's pleading he immediately stopped taking the statins. Well, this summer (about 6-7 years later) he started to have muscle cramps and would end up walking with a cane. This fall his head started to itch really bad, was extremely tender, and he couldn't stand to wear his glasses because his ears were so tender. They did a Sed rate test and his sedimentation rate was 98. He was immediately put on the standard 60 mg of prednisone. They also did the biopsy of the arteries above his ears and confirmed that he had temporal arteritis. After six weeks on 60 mg his Sed rate dropped back down to 1 but the side effects of the prednisone were disasterous. He started falling down for no reason, he had trouble maintaining his body weight, he ate everything he could get his hands on, he was not able to sleep and last but not least was the cramping in his hands and legs. I was not aware that one's fingers would bend in so many different directions at one time. Also his blood pressure skyrocketed.
They had to drop the prednisone back to 20 mg a day. Sed rate went back up to 51. Side effects subsided. They upped the prednisone to 30 mg, Sed rate dropped back to 17 where we are today. They are remaining at 30 for another month and then they will hopefully try to drop the dosage some more.
I have read everything I can get my hands on as far as Polymyalgia Rheumatica and temporal arteritis are concerned. I have found no information as to what might be the cause until I received your newsletter today and other than using prednisone to treat it and a discription of the disease there is nothing. We have been flying blind. Not being able to find any information I have concluded that if one's immune system attacks the body the immune system is lacking something. (not too scientific but made sense to me) Therefore we eat all fresh foods, over the counter meats with no sodium added, and nothing with the corn syrup fructose in it if we can help it. We are also taking some special vitamins. He is looking better and is not tiring so easily. After the first week food with no sodium added begin to taste good and has a flavor of its own. We also use very little sugar and no sugar substitutes.
When we were in Arizona this winter to see our son we brought back oodles of oranges and grapefruits. When they checked his cholesterol last month the bad cholesterol had dropped 20 points. All without those darn statin drugs.
My husband will be 70 in May and has been on no medications whatever until he did the Statins. It is really difficult for him to go from someone who felt, looked, and acted like 55 to a tired 70 year old.
Kathy Anthony