RA treatment
This article is the first in a series of articles about RA treatments.
The core treatment for RA is an arsenal of drugs
This article is the first in a series of articles about RA treatments.
This is a summary of my experiences with Orencia over the years.
The biologics are wonder drugs for some, but not for all.
I was diagnosed with RA four years ago, this month. The first few years were whirlwinds as I was also diagnosed with two cancers that each involved surgery and radiation treatments. My RA moved to the back seat then to the front and again back and forth. Now it is center stage. In 2015, I was started on infusions of Orencia. Once I realized that the biologics only help your RA by about 50%, I settled in and appreciated that they helped that much. In July the next year, I developed a horrific flu. I haven’t had a flu for years. It was exhausting. Plus, the Orencia was not working any more. I started having bad flares. My rheumatologist stopped the Orencia. After a few weeks, I was started on infusions of Remicade, a TNF inhibitor. By the third loading dose, I was having a severe flare plus I was having a bad reaction to the Remicade. I was ill. It took two months for the Remicade to clear my system and for …
Visiting my friend Ruth when I am low.
Rituxan, the final frontier February marked the second anniversary of my Rheumatoid Arthritis diagnosis. After two years of treatment, my average pain level was reduced from 10+ to an average range of 4 to 7 every single day. The constant presence of pain and a body riddled with inflammation continue to suck every drop of energy from my aging, aching body. My treatment was complicated by the addition of thyroid cancer and soon after that with the addition of breast cancer. Both required surgery. Both required radiation treatment. Both required medication. Both interfered with my RA treatment. The TNF antagonists, like Embril, are contraindicated for those who have recently had cancer. I am not allowed to have them. The ongoing treatment for thyroid cancer is to keep my body slightly hypothyroid. It helps prevent the cancer from recurring but it also increases the effects of RA fatigue. The ongoing treatment for breast cancer is anastrosole. It eliminates all estrogen in the body. It also puts me at high risk for osteoporosis as does Rheumatoid Arthritis. My treatment originally started with …
Why injection? To avoid side effects or to have more of the medication absorbed by the body. There is 25 mg/ml of medication The syringe is either tuberculin or insulin Both have a one ml capacity Both have very thin needles Have all your supplies ready Vial of methotrexate, syringe, alcohol swab. Also access to your upper belly or outer thigh. It’s easy as this Wipe off top of vial with alcohol Remove covers on syringe Draw back on the syringe to add about .5 ml of air Insert needle of syringe into vial Push in the air(avoids med leaks) withdraw the correct dose of your medication( …
I take my 10 little pills of methotrexate on Sunday afternoon. I put the ten 2.5 mg tablets in a little white bowl. I take them over a 4-5 hour period. My little ritual makes a major difference. I have no nausea from the medication. My first dose was 2/17/2013. It was 10 mg. My dose was increased gradually to 25 mg on 4/28/2013. Nausea is the most common side effect. I did have some initially but as long as I followed my ritual, I was fine. Additionally, for the first year I was tired on the day following the dose. Low dose methotrexate has been the drug of choice for the treatment of Rheumatoid Arthritis for 30 years. It is safe and generally well tolerated. It is a DMARD, disease-modifying anti-rheumatic drug. It helps with pain and swelling. It slows the progression of RA over time. Methotrexate was one of the first products of ” intelligent drug design”. It was introduced as a treatment for cancer in the 40’s. It was introduced to treat …