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Myasthenia Gravis For support and discussions on Myasthenia Gravis, Congenital Myasthenic Syndromes and LEMS. |
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#1 | |||
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I will be seeing my neurologist on Monday morning. I've been on a high dose of Prednisone for three weeks, and have been tolerating it fairly well. My current level is 60 mg per day, or 1.8mg/kg/day. My normal primary symptoms centered on my face, mouth, tong, and jaw muscles. Speech was very labored or nonexistent by end of the day. Symptoms were much less sever after sleeping. My jaw would drop and I would finding myself aiding it with my hand. I would also assist chewing with my hand. Eating was possible, but it took time, as did drinking. After eating I would have mucus collection in the back of my throat, as I did late into the night around the time I would go to bed.
My neurologist will soon begin to taper the Prednisone down to maintenance levels. After the Prednisone regimen over the last 3 weeks things have markedly improved.
No vision issues. My distance and night vision is excellent. No more double vision since the September severe MG event. After that event, I found that I needed my reading glasses more. I needed them to read the computer screen in the taxicab. I thought this was normal with age. I am using 1.5 strength. After the Prednisone I no longer need the reading glasses to read the taxicab display. But I do have additional symptoms that I did not have before. I know this may be due to the Prednisone, Mestinon, the every changing nature of MG symptoms, or a combination of all three.
Any observations will be appreciated. -Mark- |
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#2 | ||
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It sounds like you had a great response to prednisone, with minimal bad side effects, considering the dosage. Most find, however, that symptoms begin to return with a lowered dosage, especially if no other immune suppressing drug is added into the mix. You may want to discuss that with your doctor.
Unfortunately, even with treatment, you will likely never be 100% again. Only a teeny fraction ever achieve that. I know of one person, personally, and she had MG as a child and it went away in her late teens and has never returned. You will need to learn how to adapt to the day to day changes while working to find the right combination of drugs and adaptations to make your life as fulfilling as it can be. Remember, this takes time, and trial and error. There is no magic formula. Good luck! |
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"Thanks for this!" says: | Panorama (01-30-2014) |
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#3 | |||
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Quote:
It is the neck thing that concerns me the most. It is a bit painful (strained), not bad, but annoying that one is compelled to hold it up with a hand. -Mark- Last edited by Panorama; 01-30-2014 at 09:49 AM. |
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#4 | ||
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Yes, those would likely be the ones to consider. Cellcept works a little faster, and has less side effects, IMO. Imuran needs some pre-testing to check for some kind of blood marker that would indicate intolerance prior to beginning it.
Yes, the floppy neck is the pits. I've found that it comes and goes, so hopefully you will find it eases with time (but will probably return.) |
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"Thanks for this!" says: | Panorama (01-30-2014) |
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#5 | |||
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Please watch the rate at which they lower the prednisone. They lowered mine too fast the first time and I got very sick. Don't be afraid to call the doctor if you feel really bad while weaning of pregnisone. It may be the prednisone and not the MG.
good luck kathie |
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"Thanks for this!" says: | Panorama (01-30-2014) |
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#6 | |||
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Quote:
![]() When I was a paperboy in the 1960s, one of the people on my rout had his head on his chest. It was like his head fell down, turned left, and his left ear was touching his chest by his heart. I never knew the cause. Is it possible it was an extreme case of MG? -Mark- |
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#7 | |||
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Has anybody considered the possibility that August Rodin's master work "The Thinker" was not a sculpture of a smart guy, but rather an undiagnosed Myastehenia Gravis sufferer?
-Mark- |
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"Thanks for this!" says: | bny806 (01-30-2014), southblues (01-30-2014) |
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