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Antibody Tests on Prescription Hydrocortisone
Perhaps this is one of those questions with a perfectly obvious answer, but I'm going to ask it anyway: will 20 mg of hydrocortisone daily affect results from antibody tests? I got three negatives (one a very nearly positive) from tests done recently. I was diagnosed quite a number of years ago as having adrenal insufficiency and take hydrocortisone daily. The hc really does seem to help, but each dose only works for about 3.5 hours. I also take levothroid and Armour Thyroid for hypothyroidism.
Best, Laurie |
Dyankee, Whether it's ingested, inhaled, or rubbed on, steroids do have an effect on antibody production!
Do you have adrenal insufficiency or Addison's disease? It might be time for a recheck with an endocrinologist! This is archived prescribing information for levothroid. I don't know which brand you take. It has a lot of potential drug and food interactions, including steroids. http://dailymed.nlm.nih.gov/dailymed...b-0a05d41f0012 Is there a reason you take both that and Armour Thyroid? I really think a consult with an endo would be a good idea. No question is stupid, especially when it comes to drugs!! Annie |
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Best, Laurie |
The whole point of taking the corticosteroids is to decrease the production of antibody. Those people are being paid way too much for what they do.......
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Hydrocortisone replacement is different
For those of us who have adrenal failure/insufficiency, taking hydrocortisone is actually replacing what our bodies should be producing but aren't. This puts us in the same category as people who have normal adrenal function, and therefore shouldn't cause any suppression of antibody production. I agree that taking corticosteroids on top of normal adrenal function, in high doses, will suppress antibody production--this is why they use it, after all. It also suppresses the adrenal glands, which is why you have to taper off slowly.
But if your adrenal glands don't produce enough to begin with, your life literally depends on taking replacement cortisol. Read about Addison's crisis--this is not where we want to go. I would strongly encourage you to keep taking the hydrocortisone, and find an endocrinologist who can evaluate you for Schmidt's syndrome: adrenal failure/insufficiency plus either/both of thyroid failure/insufficiency and/or Type ONE diabetes. As Laurie said, there is a very short effect from hydrocortisone--it is not like prednisone. Cortisol is necessary for normal cell function in your body. Adrenal failure/insufficiency is not a condition to take lightly--you can die from it. Please be careful ... just sayin'. |
Rose, I'm sorry, but that is, in fact, incorrect. Hydrocortisone has the same effect on the adrenals, whether you have Addison's or not.
http://www.mayoclinic.org/drugs-supp...s/drg-20075259 http://www.rxlist.com/cortef-drug/cl...armacology.htm The bottom line is that it suppresses the immune system, the one that produces antibodies. It can make tests look normal when they actually are not. Guys, any steroid has far reaching effects and on various parts of the body. Annie |
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