7: Polymyalgia Rheumatica Flashcards
Name clinical features of polymyalgia rheumatica (6)?
- 50 + (usually 70+).
- Acute onset pain for weeks in 2 or more axial areas (neck, shoulders, pelvic girdle).
- Morning stiffness 1+ hour.
- Rapid response to low-dose steroids (Prednisone 20 mg/day or less).
- Absence of other explanation.
- ESR of 40+.
Polymyalgia rheumatica is associated with _____.
Giant Cell Arteritis
What is the treatment if a patient with polymyalgia rheumatica has visual changes, jaw pain, and scalp tenderness?
Emergency. Could be giant cell arteritis. High dose of steroids to prevent blindness.
What is the treatment for polymyalgia rheumatica?
Low-dose Prednisone (15-20 mg/day) that is tapered to lowest dose and continues for at least a year.
Why should treatment last at least 1 year?
Recurrent is 70% if treatment is <1 year but only 30% if treatment is >1 year.
What is a good taper for polymyalgia rheumatica?
Begin at 20 mg/day for 2 months. Decrease by 5 mg q 2 months until 5 mg/day. Keep patient at 5 mg/day for remainder of full year. Then decrease by 1 mg every month until taper complete.
If a patient fails 2 attempts to taper Prednisone, what treatment is used?
Methotrexate. Increase Prednisone to the lowest effective dose, then add Methotrexate.
Why is increasing Prednisone to 20 mg/day not appealing if they fail the taper?
Unnecessary risk of toxicity.
Why is adding infliximab not an appealing option for patients who fail the Prednisone taper?
Not shown to be effective in polymyalgia rheumatica.