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Prednisone
Prednisone
Pronunciation
(PRED ni sone)
Brand Names
Deltasone®; Liquid Pred®; Meticorten®; Orasone®; Prednicen-M®
Canadian/Mexican Brand Names
Apo-Prednisone® (Canada); Jaa-Prednisone® (Canada); Novo-Prednisone® (Canada);
Wimpred® (Canada)
Therapeutic Categories
Anti-inflammatory Agent; Corticosteroid; Corticosteroid, Systemic;
Glucocorticoid
What is this medicine used for?
- This medicine is used for the treatment of inflamed areas of the body,
severe allergies, skin problems, asthma, COPD, organ transplantation,
leukemias/lymphomas, brain swelling, ulcerative colitis, sarcoidosis, spinal
cord injuries, Addison's disease, and arthritis.
- This medicine is used in other diseases where the anti-inflammatory or
immunosuppressant properties are needed. Talk with healthcare provider.
How does it work?
- Prednisone is a man-made form of an important chemical produced in the
body.
- Prednisone puts down the body's response to the allergen (the cause of the
allergy) and reduces swelling, redness, itching, and other symptoms of allergy.
- It also reduces the body's ability to fight infection.
How is it best taken?
- Take with food. Take in the morning if you are taking this medicine once a
day.
- A liquid (concentrate, syrup) is available if you cannot swallow pills.
Those who have feeding tubes can also use the liquid. Flush the feeding tube
before and after medicine is given.
- Do not suddenly stop using this medicine if you have been taking it for a
long time. Medicine should be slowly decreased.
What do I do if I miss a dose?
- Take a missed dose as soon as possible.
- If it is almost time for the next dose, skip the missed one. Return to your
regular schedule.
- Do not take a double dose or extra doses.
- Do not change dose or stop taking medicine without talking with healthcare
provider.
What are the precautions when taking this
medicine?
- Wear disease medical alert identification if you have asthma, lung disease,
or are an allergy sufferer or if you are going to be on this medicine longer
than 3-4 weeks.
- Tell healthcare provider if you are currently being treated for any
infections.
- Unless healthcare provider told you to stop, it is dangerous to run out of
this medication. Get it refilled today!
- Avoid alcohol (includes wine, beer, and liquor). Alcohol increases risk of
stomach irritation/ulcers.
- If you have had a stomach ulcer or bleeding, tell healthcare provider. Can
cause ulcers.
- Use caution if you have a weakened heart. Salt and water can accumulate.
Talk with healthcare provider.
- Use caution if you are diabetic. Talk with healthcare provider. Diabetic
medicine may need increasing.
- Use caution if you have high blood pressure. Your blood pressure may
increase. Talk with healthcare provider.
- Tell dentists, surgeons, and other healthcare providers about this
medicine.
- Tell healthcare provider if you are allergic to any medicine. Make sure to
tell about the allergy and how it affected you. This includes telling about
rash; hives; itching; shortness of breath; wheezing; cough; swelling of face,
lips, tongue, throat; or any other symptoms involved.
- Tell healthcare provider if you are pregnant or plan on getting pregnant.
- Tell healthcare provider if you are breast-feeding.
What are the common side effects of this
medicine?
- Risk of infection. Avoid crowds and people with infections, colds, or flu.
- High blood sugar. Can cause diabetes mellitus while on medicine, usually
reverses when stopped.
- Menstrual changes. If you are premenopausal you may not have period. If you
are postmenopausal you may have bleeding or spotting.
- Weakened bones. Take calcium and vitamin D as recommended by healthcare
provider.
- Weight gain. This is because of salt and water gain or because of hunger
and eating more.
- Muscular weakness, especially in the thighs and upper arms.
- Skin changes (pimples, stretch marks, slow healing if cut, hair growth).
- Cataracts, glaucoma with long-term use.
- Changes in fat distribution. Fat stores can move to face and trunk.
- Belly pain and cramps.
- Nausea or vomiting. Small frequent meals, frequent mouth care, sucking hard
candy, or chewing gum may help.
What should I monitor?
- If a child is using this medicine, monitor growth carefully.
- Watch for swelling of legs or belly, shortness of breath, weight gain,
exercise tolerance. If any of these worsen, talk with healthcare provider.
- Check blood sugar as ordered by healthcare provider. Watch for high blood
sugar. Causes many trips to the bathroom, thirst, weight loss.
- Watch for signs of infection.
Reasons to call healthcare provider
immediately
- Signs of a life-threatening reaction. These include wheezing; tightness in
the chest; fever; itching; bad cough; blue skin color; fits; swelling of face,
lips, tongue, or throat.
- Signs of infection (fever greater than 99 degrees, chills, sore throat,
cough, increased sputum or change in color, painful urination, mouth sores,
wound that will not heal, anal itching or pain).
- For females, vaginal discharge and/or itching.
- Chest pains, fast heartbeats, shortness of breath, or decreased ability to
walk.
- Severe nausea, vomiting, and/or diarrhea.
- Menstrual changes. This includes lots of bleeding, spotting, or bleeding
between cycles.
- Feeling weak, tired, irritable, trembling, having rapid heartbeats,
confusion, sweating, dizziness, especially if you missed a dose or recently
stopped this medicine.
- Any rash.
- No improvement in condition or feeling worse.
How should I store this medicine?
- Store in a tight container at room temperature.
General statements
- Do not share your medicine with others and do not take anyone else's
medicine.
- Keep all medicine out of the reach of children and pets.
- Keep a list of all your medicines (prescription, herbal/supplements,
vitamins, over-the-counter) with you. Give this list to healthcare provider
(doctor, nurse, pharmacist, physician assistant)
- Talk with healthcare provider before starting any new medicine, including
over-the-counter or natural products (herbs, vitamins).
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