RA News Headlines, Vol. 6: Ibuprofen for Pain, Orencia Shots, New RA test, RA Inflammation Increases CV Risk | Rheumatoid Arthritis Warrior

E-Mail 'RA News Headlines, Vol. 6: Ibuprofen for Pain, Orencia Shots, New RA test, RA Inflammation Increases CV Risk' To A Friend

Email a copy of 'RA News Headlines, Vol. 6: Ibuprofen for Pain, Orencia Shots, New RA test, RA Inflammation Increases CV Risk' to a friend

* Required Field






Separate multiple entries with a comma. Maximum 5 entries.



Separate multiple entries with a comma. Maximum 5 entries.


E-Mail Image Verification

Loading ... Loading ...

8 thoughts on “RA News Headlines, Vol. 6: Ibuprofen for Pain, Orencia Shots, New RA test, RA Inflammation Increases CV Risk

  • September 7, 2011 at 12:16 pm
    Permalink

    Thank you Kelly for the articles, I found it very interesting on the pain relief study, perhaps for one that doesn’t have a CVD, motrin would be more beneficial for pain relief. Thank you again for your hard work with everything that you deal with alone. God bless you Girl, your in my prayers daily.

  • September 7, 2011 at 10:19 pm
    Permalink

    Interesting stuff, thank you againg for presenting this to us here, never would have come across it otherwise!
    Read with interest the study on Ibuprofen med article. It seems though that all study patients had osteo and not ra. I can’t help but wonder after I take 800mg of advil if it really does anything, dulls the pain a bit, but takes away none of the swelling. Is there swelling in osteo? I had always thought that ibuprofen took away swelling, and tylenol took away pain. Advil always worked for everything pre ra, so after my very first flare, and I took it and it did nothing, I knew something was very wrong long before I went to the dr.

    • September 8, 2011 at 1:19 am
      Permalink

      Yes, I realize the test group on pain was knee arthritis (what is now commonly called OA). The reason for choosing a group who all had the same pain problem was, I assumed, so that the researchers could try to find a homogeneous group. I think they meant to imply that the same trends that they noticed for pain relief only could possibly be applied to other pain – at least thats what the title & abstract seemed to imply.
      I’ve read conflicting comments on whether arthritis/OA can be inflammatory, but I’d agree with you that RA is obviously more inflammatory. Much of RA pain (most?) according to patients is not related to the swelling – they don’t correlate completely for sure. You’ll hear many patients have 1 without the other at various times. That tells me one is not necessarily always the cause of the other.
      Ibuprofen is known (before this study) for being better at taking away pain than Tylenol. I think there are other studies, but also because Tylenol doesn’t do much for inflammation and much of it is lost in the liver in many people. Agreed, 800mg is the ibu dose that I use also. RA is thought to be one of the most painful conditions so it makes sense that if we have inflammation all over the body and intense pain, that a higher dose is needed. I find it does reduce swelling for me sometimes, but not always. Like you said, it only dulls the pain a bit. But it’s a big help if you live in constant flare that the dmards don’t stop. Even the 20% improvement from ibu is a help. (On a very personal note, I often have to combine that with half a Lortab to be able to keep pushing myself to do things. I can tolerate a pretty high level of pain 24/7 like most RA patients, but there is a limit to what I can tolerate & also force myself to keep moving without the pain distracting me too much.)

      • September 14, 2011 at 12:05 am
        Permalink

        I just wanted to share that I took high doses of Ibuprofen for six years for chronic back pain before my RA diagnosis and it just about destroyed my stomach…Before that I had a VERY strong stomach…I had to switch to Tylenol and that helped my pain for several years without hurting my stomach…Now I take Methadone every day and I am extremely comfortable most of the time…How are patients supposed to protect their stomachs from high doses of Ibuprofen over an extended period of time such as when you suffer from RA?
        Jewell

  • September 9, 2011 at 2:41 pm
    Permalink

    I don’t take my NSAID (meloxicam – in past taken Ibuprofen, oxaprozin and piroxicam) at the same as any tylenol. I wait a minimum of 2 hrs, preferrably 4 hrs before I take any tylenol. I’d always heard it was best to alternate dosing times if you had to take both. I wonder if it would’ve made a difference in that study. Also Ibuprofen has a short half life, and for me, the pain relief from that wears off too fast so I take the longer-acting NSAIDs. Sure glad my rheumy recommended those.

  • October 5, 2011 at 11:22 am
    Permalink

    I go in for an injection of Orencia once a month, and I must tell you, it is my miracle drug. I has greatly improved my life. My joint pain is almost nil. My right index finger was beginning to “have a mind of its own” so to speak. It was crooked, and I could not pick up coins or other small objects and now the pain has subsided, and my index finger has straightened. I also no longer have toe or elbow pain! It is wonderful! What I am concerned about now is the fact that I signed up for long term health care and was denied because of my RA. I am only 55 and am very active! EVen though I am being pro-active with my RA, I was still denied. Is there anyone else there that has also been denied due to their RA and is there ANY insurance company who will insure an RA patient for long-term care?

    • October 5, 2011 at 1:27 pm
      Permalink

      I am very glad to hear stories about a treatment working. It gives the rest of us hope to hear it. The insurance questions are good ones – I heard it mentioned once or twice but have no data on it.

Comments are closed.

“imaware™
    Advertisement