Jump to content
This site uses cookies. Continued use is acceptance of our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. More Info... ×
  • Welcome to Celiac.com!

    You have found your celiac tribe! Join us and ask questions in our forum, share your story, and connect with others.




  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A1):



    Celiac.com Sponsor (A1-M):


  • Get Celiac.com Updates:
    Support Our Content
    eNewsletter
    Donate

Prednisone As Treatment?


pturse

Recommended Posts

pturse Apprentice

My GI recently told me that my villi damage is really bad. He gave me a few options one of which is following a super strict diet for the next four weeks followed by another endoscopy/colonoscopy.

He said if the diet is not working, as I have been on it since January, that I may have a severe form of Celiac where I am not responsive to the gluten-free diet and that steriods may be an option. He knows I am anti any type of drug so we are trying the super strict diet first to see what results if any I may get.

I was just curious if anyone has tried prednisone for celiac disease. I have had friends and relative take it for other reasons and I am not a fan of this drug. It does horrible things to your mind and body depending on the dosage.


Celiac.com Sponsor (A8):
Celiac.com Sponsor (A8):



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



lovegrov Collaborator

Anybody who has celiac should be following a super-strict diet. It's really not a choice. Pay attention to cross-contamination issues. Resolve to eat simply -- meat and fresh fruit and vegetables.

Very, very few people actually end up with refractory sprue, which is what your doctor is talking about. Dr. Cynthia Rudert, one of the leading celiac doctors in the country, says refractory sprue is exceedingly rare. I'm not sure why you're doctor's being so negative and scaring you to death before you even start the diet. Virtually everybody who follows the diet heals completely.

My villi were so damaged they couldn't even find villi. As my GI said, the small bowel should look like a shag carpet. Mine looked like linoleum. You can't damage the villi any more than that. I was in such bad shape I was literally dying of malnutrition. 11 days in the hospital and 10 weeks off work. Yet I recovered completely.

While you should feel at least somewhat better in four weeks, IMO that simply is not enough time to tell whether or not you will heal completely. It's much too early to do another biopsy and it definitely is NOT enough time for the doctor just to give up and put you on prednisone. Some people take as long as 18 months to heal. I wasn't back to "normal" for about 10 months.

richard

pturse Apprentice

No, I have been following the diet since January and have been watching the contamination however, there is always a "chance" what I thought was, wasn't.

But after being on the diet last year for 6 months as well, I did not feel ANY better whatsoever. It has been more then a year since my last biopsy, my recent GI said that my blood test levels for celiac were completely off the charts.

He hasn't scared me to death, but I was curious if any one out there has used prednisone and what reactions if any, did they get.

As for eating fruits, meats and vegetables . . . that is not an option. I am a vegetarian who can't have dairy and at this point, ALL vegetables, roughage & legumes flow through my system like water. I love them, but find myself limiting vegetables and fruit. Right now I am starting out on a rice only diet until I feel a little bit better. I also am an active person so I need my stomach to be settled for a run that I have this weekend.

Just to clarify, I was diagnosed over a year ago - went on the diet for about 5-6 months w/no relief. Got frustrated and went off it for about 2-3 months and then made a New Years Resolution to get back on it and stick w/it for good. It has been since January . . . no relief what so ever.

lovegrov Collaborator

Sorry, didn't remember your history and you didn't give it in your first post. Also when you mentioned being on a strict gluten-free diet for four weeks, I assumed that meant you had not been on a strict gluten-free diet.

richard

pturse Apprentice

No worries. Should have been more clear.

debimashni Newbie

I have been taking prednisone on an "as needed" basis for the flares I experience with Behcet's disease (I also take prograf daily and enbrel injections 2x/week. When I was diagnosed with celiac last spring, my biopsy showed "partially treated" celiac sprue, which I suspect was related to taking prednisone.

As for taking prednisone, it works awesome, but has terrible side effects. I take it only when I my Behcets flares are so bad I can't stand it anymore. I usually take 50mg x 3 days, or I'll do a 2 week taper. Last year I took it everyday and I gained 30 lbs (I finally have lost most of it), I had the "moon face", terrible mood swings, etc. It is such a tough decision, because my physical symptoms are so much better on prednisone, but mentally, it isn't worth it. If someone could develop a steriod without the side effects, it would be a gold mine!!!

If you have to take it, try to use the lowest dose possible. Some people get away with taking it every other day with minimal side effects. If you are put on it, and after you have some improvement, maybe you could get by with taking a short "blast of steriods" like I do, when your symptoms are bad.

You are welcome to email me if you have any questions.

Deb Mashni

Guest gillian502

My situation sounds just like yours, though I am finally improving somewhat. I was gluten-free for 8 months when my antibodies showed no improvement, and I am the most strictly gluten-free person I know. No major gluten accidents, either. I was depressed and did not feel much better after sticking with this diet, and I was ready for steroids, too (my villi were also severly damaged and I was hospitalized at Mayo for 3 weeks.) In the end, I gave it some more time and double checked every item I ate, and did find some minor problems and removed them from my diet. I also had a colonoscopy, which showed I have colitis in addition to celiac disease. I started on a drug called Aciphex for gastritis, too, which improved the way I feel. My antibodies after 11 months gluten-free showed some major improvement, finally, and I do feel better in some ways though not perfect.

My advice would be give it more time, and then consider trying a less harmful steroid that is meant for the intestines specifically. It's called Entocort, aka Budesonide. I'm considering it myself, with one exception...it may or may not be gluten-free, the company doesn't know for sure, they are still researching it. I would take it before I took Pred., though!


Celiac.com Sponsor (A8):
Celiac.com Sponsor (A8):



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



Guest jhmom

Hi pturse, I am sorry you are having a tough time and I hope you find som relief soon. I too have been strictly gluten-free for going on 14 months with little to no improvements. After going gluten-free I could tell a difference, mainly the (double-overing) abdominal pain was gone, but thats about it, still have diarrhea, cramps, weight loss, etc.

It is possible to have something else wrong in addition to Celiac, has your doctor ordered more tests / procedures? Or has mentioned the possiblity of something else? Also you may have a sensitivity to other foods, such as soy, yeast, etc.

As far as the Pred, I have been thinking the same thing myself, wondering if would help me feel better. Let us know how you are getting along, take care. :)

Guest gillian502

I really had no idea there are so many of us still not doing well...what's up with us anyway?! :P If anyone makes a choice about the steroids, let me know, I'd like to hear your experiences first hand. Also, what do you all think of taking Entocort even though it cannot be absolutley guaranteed as gluten-free yet? Worth taking a chance on it, or foolish to try if it's possibly not gluten-free?

pturse Apprentice

Thank you for everyone's responses & advice.

My doctor said that every celiac sufferer SHOULD feel better after being on the diet almost immediatly (as in 3 week or so). If they don't, that is an indication that something else is wrong or like many of you said, there may be other "allergies" involved.

I still have the abdominal cramping. I was even given a small dosage of a anti-depressant that was supposed to relax my muscles but it didn't work and only made "stuff" flow through my system faster. Needless to say, I am no longer on that.

I still have terrible D (actually that is all I have) it just depends on how many times a day I go. I am thinking of trying the SCDiet everyone was talking about in other boards but I am a vegetarian marathon runner and so making my own bread and eating rice are huge carbs that I feel like I need. I ordered the book and will read it first before I try anything. But at this point, running is impossible most days . . . I find myself running back home to use the facilities. :(

I have a feeling that it may be refractory sprue. I know it is rare but that is not to say it is impossible. So for the next four weeks I am going to do the rice diet for the most part to settle my stomach . . . however, I am not having a weight loss issue it is more of a gain issue some days. Which I guess is good but I don't really need to lose or gain any. I just hate that I crave food but then I feel sick after eating it, sometimes even rice. Sorry for venting. Just frustrated I guess.

I hope they develope a pill (or cure) for it sometime soon.

Guest gillian502

Have you ever had a colonoscopy yet, though? This sounds alot like Colitis or Crohn's, and those are far more common that RS. I thought I had RS too, until I found it was in fact colitis.

Guest jhmom

I agree with Gillian about it possibly being UC or Crohn's, my doctor is checking me for Crohn's again. He thinks the problem may be in my small instestines but not sure exactly what it is. We tried the antidepressant and it did not work at all. He has tried Flagyl in case it was a parasite now he has me on a new antibiotic that works only on the intestines, in case it's a bacterial thing going on.

I do hope you feel better soon! It's terrible to feel bad every day. I know for me I am down to eating the bare minium, no fruit, veggies, nuts or red meat. All of those make me cramp terribly, gives me gas and gives me a "yucky" feeling! :( so it's chicken, gluten-free breads, soup, etc. for me.

Take care

pturse Apprentice

Thank you again for your suggestions.

I had a terrible GI Dr. before the one I currently have. He was the one who had me do a colonoscopy and endoscopy . . . he said the results came back negative for the Crohns and such but now we are having a terrible time getting the medical records from him so that my current (and good) GI can see the test and the results.

I may be going for another colonscopy though in January. I know the villi damage seems only to be in the bottom half of my small intestines or so I was told.

I thought I had Crohns as well only because I know foods (especially those with seeds), such as tomatoes and cucumbers really bother me as well as peanuts, mushrooms and stuff.

So we will see. It is glad to know I am not alone in not feeling well. I have to learn to eat smaller quantities I guess too. Small portions are easier to digest and to as far from bedtime as possible. Those old habits are so hard to break but I am trying to find the will power. Halloween isn't helping matters. :)

debmidge Rising Star

pturse: Please keep us posted. My husband has same troubles ....I am beginning to think that in the same manner that doctors thought celiac was rare, that they say refractory sprue is rare. Surprise! celiac is not as rare as once thought and now I am beginning to believe tht refractory sprue isn't rare either.

SteveW Rookie

Gillian

As you stated Entocort cannot guarantee that there product is gluten-free because sometimes there venders use Corn starch and sometimes WHEAT starch. I was told this by the company and so was my GI. I was told to stay off that drug.

pturse,

I currently taking a 20 day run at 10 mg of prednisone for Crohns( I also have Celiac)- and it does work. BUT its like making a deal with the devil. I helps a lot of symptoms but replaces them with many side effects. Also my experience is that it doesn't Cure anything-my GI problems have returned soon after tapering off both times I took it.

If you do end up on Prednisone make sure the bottle states its gluten-free. Roxane brand is gluten-free.

Steve

Guest gillian502

That is so depressing to hear about Entocort. I was really hoping to take it, and I'm not going near Prednisone. Did the company tell you that recently? I spoke to them about 2 months ago when they said they were beginnning to believe it was gluten-free but were not completely done with their investigation of it. Is there a generic yet that you know of?

SteveW Rookie

I called 2 weeks ago. Trying to avoid another go round with the devil drug but...... I was a little shocked that a company doesn't know EXACTLY what is in there product!!!!

No generics yet. I wouldn't recommend generic drug for us Celiacs unless it's clearly stated as gluten-free.

debmidge Rising Star

It's absolutely evil :angry: for a drug company, prescription and OTC, not to know what's in their product. The FDA regulates them, so perhaps it's in our best interest to let the FDA know that we are unhappy with these types of answers:

1) We don't know if the product is gluten free.

2) We don't know if our suppliers ingredients are gluten-free because they change from time to time.

3) We'll have to call you back when we know (I got that one from a vitamin company and it's been about 3 weeks and I am still waiting; I call THEM every week. This company is Puritan's Pride. Never order again)

4) And I got this one recently (not verbatim): We are aware of a lot of food allergies. Many people are alleric to nuts and it's deadly (the Cust Ser rep. pretty much told me to count my blessings that the gluten sensitivity is not deadly like peanut allergy! Oh, and they can't put ALL ingredients that are sources of sensitivity on the label. This company was Fiber Choice chewable fiber tablets)

5) and this is the best one: We can't guarantee that cross contamination doesn't occur during the manufacturing process.

Guest gillian502

I also want to add that somebody needs to do something about all the clueless pharmacists out there. I'm sick of having to get all the information about the company that supplies the product, their number and address, etc., so I can make all the calls and await the responses about gluten in their meds. Why aren't the pharmacists being trained to do this? Shouldn't this be part of their job? I take a lot of meds so this is a constant annoyance for me. My local pharmacist has never heard of gluten and doesn't even know what it is, even though I've asked about at least 10 times now. They should at least know what this stuff means. I'm tired of doing these people's jobs for them.

lovegrov Collaborator

I've always considered it my job to find out whether a product has gluten. I don't trust somebody else to do it.

Do you expect your grocer to know whether there's gluten in all the products he sells? If not, why would you expect the pharmacist to know? Remember that there's something like 100,000 medications on the market.

richard

angel-jd1 Community Regular

I work in 2 pharmacies as a pharmacy technician. I would NEVER ask my pharmacist to do the footwork for me. They are WAY too busy and stressed to take time out of their day to sit on hold for 45 min with a drug company to find out ingredients.

It is sooo much easier for everyone involved if you find out the drug manufacturer and call them yourself. Then you aren't getting second hand information. You can also ask any questions you feel are necessary, and it's one less headache for a busy person who needs to do their job. :)

Just my 2 cents !

-Jessica

Guest gillian502

Sorry but a grocer is not the same to me as a pharmacist. I think it is lazy for a pharmacist to never have heard of the word gluten, that's just my opinion. I didn't mean any disrespect by it, but I'm getting tired of people who haven't heard the word gluten and haven't bothered to learn. If I'm the only one who feels this way, so be it.

debmidge Rising Star

Sorry, I too think it's the pharmacist's job to look up the info. I am sure that the PDR lists ingredients and every pharmacy has this book, or has access to it on line. Pharmacists are licensed and it's part of their job. I'd even compromise if the pharmacist or assistant would "assist" me by providing me with the drug company's toll free (or not toll free) phone number and I'll find out myself.

My pharmacist pulled this one on me, as he didn't know what gluten was and said he didn't have the generic drug company's phone number and couldn't help me. Well I "fired" that pharamacy that day and get my prescriptions elsewhere. If I can't turn to the pharmacy for help on their own prescription, then who can I turn to?

Guest Libbyk

pturse-

back to your original thread, I was also put on Prednizone when I was first (very conclusively) dianosed. I was taking (I think) 20 a day, then tapered after a couple months. I had some mild side effects, but it made a dramatic improvement in my well being, I was able to keep food in me longer, instead of feeling like a hose.

I took myself off of it, and 11 months later, I feel way better than I have in years, but not all the way where I want to be. I was having frequent relapses, some traceable to contamination, others not. I went back on a very low dose (5 mg, once a day) and have felt no side affects, but also not as fragile.

I hate to say it, but I feel better. And I am very anti drug. My doctor explained it to me as the steroids reducing the inflamation enough for my body to be able to take over. I hope this different perspective is helpful

Lib

lovegrov Collaborator

I didn't say the pharmacist shouldn't know what gluten means. But should the pharmacist know every single ingredient that MIGHT hide gluten? Do you really think the pharmacist is the one who should call the manufacturer? Not me. I want to hear what the manufacturer says, particularly since pharmaceutical companies are the worst about CYA statements. I don't want the pharmacist translating or interpreting for me, especially if he or she knows nothing about celiac.

As for looking it up in the PDR, that's all fine and dandy. My pharmacist does this for me any time I ask (actually he usually just puylls the insert for the medication). But that isn't much help when it says one of the ingredients is "starch."

If your pharmacist is refusing to help you in any way then you should definitely find a new one. At a minimum they should show you ingredients and help with phone numbers (although they truly do not always have a number for some of the generics). They should also have a notation in their system about your celiac disease. My main point was that I don't expect and don't want my pharmacist to be the one calling the manufacturer.

richard

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.

  • Get Celiac.com Updates:
    Support Celiac.com:
    Donate

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A17):
    Celiac.com Sponsor (A17):





    Celiac.com Sponsors (A17-M):




  • Recent Activity

    1. - Jess270 replied to AnnaNZ's topic in Celiac Disease Pre-Diagnosis, Testing & Symptoms
      29

      Bitters for digestion?

    2. - cristiana commented on Jefferson Adams's article in Origins of Celiac Disease
      7

      Why Bananas No Longer Cure Celiac Disease

    3. - trents replied to Dawn Meyers's topic in Related Issues & Disorders
      23

      Vaccines

    4. - GeoPeanut replied to Dawn Meyers's topic in Related Issues & Disorders
      23

      Vaccines

    5. - trents replied to KRipple's topic in Celiac Disease Pre-Diagnosis, Testing & Symptoms
      1

      Celiac or Addison's complications? Can someone share their experience?


  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A19):



  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      128,060
    • Most Online (within 30 mins)
      7,748

    mary langworthy
    Newest Member
    mary langworthy
    Joined

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A20):


  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      121k
    • Total Posts
      70.6k

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A22):





  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A21):



  • Upcoming Events

  • Posts

    • Jess270
      This sounds to me like histamine intolerance. Some foods have more or less histamine. processed or aged meats, fermented food like yoghurt or kimchi and bread (yeast), spinach, eggplant and mushroom are high in histamine. Other foods like tomatoes are histamine liberators, they encourage your mast cells to release histamine, which can also trigger the reactions you describe, flu like symptoms, joint pain, urinary tract irritation, rash, stomach upset, nausea, diarrhoea & fatigue. I had liver pain like you describe, as part of the intolerance is usually a sluggish liver that makes processing all the histamine difficult. There are multiple possible root causes of histamine intolerance, usually it’s a symptom of something else. In my case, leaky gut (damaged gut wall)caused by undiagnosed celiac, but for others it’s leaky gut caused by other things like dysbiosis. Some people also experience histamine intolerance due to mould exposure or low levels of DAO (the enzyme that breaks down histamine in the gut). I’d try a low histamine diet & if that doesn’t improve symptoms fully, try low oxalate too. As others have suggested, supplements like vitamin d, b, l-glutamine to support a healthy gut & a good liver support supplement too. If you’re in a histamine flare take vitamin c to bowel tolerance & your symptoms will calm down (avoid if you find you have oxalate intolerance though). Best of luck 
    • trents
      @GeoPeanut, milk is one of the better sources of iodine. Iodine is known to exacerbate dermatitis herpetiformis. Many people find that a low iodine diet helps them avoid dermatitis herpetiformis outbreaks. So, maybe the fact that you have limited your dairy intake of late is helping with that.
    • GeoPeanut
      Hi, I'm new here. Sorry for your troubles.herenis a thought to mull over. I recently was diagnosed with celiac disease,  and hashimoto's and dermatitis herpetiformis after getting covid 19. I eat butter, and 1/2 cup of Nancy's yogurt daily. I stopped all other dairy and  dermatitis herpetiformis is gone! I also make grass fed beef bone broth to help with myopathy that has occurred. 
    • trents
      Welcome to the forum, @KRipple! Sorry to hear of all your husband's health problems. I can only imagine how anxious this makes you as when our spouse suffers we hurt right along with them. Can you post the results from the Celiac blood testing for us to look at? We would need the names of the tests run, the numeric results and (this is important) the reference ranges for each test used to establish high/low/negative/positive. Different labs use different rating scales so this is why I ask for this. There aren't industry standards. Has your husband seen any improvement from eliminating gluten from his diet? If your husband had any positive results from his celiac blood antibody testing, this is likely what triggered the consult with a  GI doc for an endoscopy. During the endoscopy, the GI doc will likely biopsy the lining of the small bowel lining to check for the damage caused by celiac disease. This would be for confirmation of the results of the blood tests and is considered the gold standard of celiac disease diagnosis. But here is some difficult information I have for you. If your husband has been gluten free already for months leading up to the endoscopy/biopsy, it will likely invalidate the biopsy and result in a false negative. Starting the gluten free diet now will allow the lining of the small bowel to begin healing and if enough healing takes place before the biopsy happens, there will be no damage to see. How far out is the endoscopy scheduled for? There still may be time for your husband to go back on gluten, what we call a "gluten challenge" to ensure valid test results.
    • kate g
      Ive read articles that there is stage 2 research being conducted for drugs that will limit damage to celiacs through cross contamination- how close are they to this will there be enough funding to create a mainstream drug? 
×
×
  • Create New...