Posted on Nov 27, 2021
Transplants minus a lifelong regimen of anti-rejection drugs? It's becoming a reality at UCLA...
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Posted 3 y ago
Responses: 2
Is it true that the anti-inflamatory Predizone given to transplant patients can cause Osteoperosis? I took it when I had pneumonia in Iraq and I felt like I could stay awake for days. I had to force myself to sleep.
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LTC John Shaw
Osteoporosis is listed in the General side effects.
https://www.medicinenet.com/prednisone/article.htm
https://www.medicinenet.com/prednisone/article.htm
Prednisone Side Effects, Dosage, Uses & Withdrawal Symptoms
Prednisone (Prednisone Intensol, Rayos) is a drug used for suppressing the immune system and inflammation such as asthma, severe psoriasis, lupus, ulcerative colitis, Crohn's disease, and several types of arthritis. Side effects, drug interactions, dosage, and pregnancy and breastfeeding safety information are provided.
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SFC Kelly Fuerhoff
I don't know what predizone is. But my daughter and other transplant recipients take prednisone after transplant. She was down to a very low dose of it and then her team stopped it 2 years ago I think. Now she's only on Tacrolimus (Prograf), Mycophenolate (Cellcept) and very small dose of Vit D. That's a lot better than where she was pre transplant and even up to a year post. From post to a year later she was on about 6-7 meds. Pre transplant I can't remember. Too many for an infant, toddler and young child.
She never had any adverse reactions to the prednisone (or any of her meds) but she also had a very small dose of it once they tapered it down. Monthly labs since a year post. She's four years post.
I'm hoping by the time she needs another kidney, hopefully into her 20s or later, all these things are common practice. Either this or the artificial kidney. I don't want her to be on dialysis ever again. I don't think she remembers the first time on it from 2-3 years old.
She never had any adverse reactions to the prednisone (or any of her meds) but she also had a very small dose of it once they tapered it down. Monthly labs since a year post. She's four years post.
I'm hoping by the time she needs another kidney, hopefully into her 20s or later, all these things are common practice. Either this or the artificial kidney. I don't want her to be on dialysis ever again. I don't think she remembers the first time on it from 2-3 years old.
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This would be great if they get to a point where transplant recipients don't need life long medicine to live. It's a great step forward this along with artificial kidney being worked on.
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