Paul,Pebbledash wrote:Silly question, perhaps . . . is it common (or, at least, not unusual) to have the odd "bad" day when on Budesonide?
I'm on my last few days (unless I decide to prolong the taper) of 3 per day, but this last week I have had the odd day in which I returned to the D.
If I recall correctly, you're on your second round of budesonide after relapsing and it took at least 10 days before the budesonide took effect this time. Now you've had a watery diarrhea day. In my opinion, you should stay the budesonide at 9 mg per day for at least eight weeks and then begin a long, slow taper for six months to a year.
That's not just my opinion. Here is the official American Gastroenterological Association Institute Guideline on the Medical Management of Microscopic Colitis:
http://repositorio.uchile.cl/bitstream/ ... sequence=1
Recommendation 1, for induction, is an eight week course of budesonide at 9 mg per day. Recommendation 9, for maintenance patients with a recurrence of symptoms, is as follows: "Although maintenance dosing of budesonide may start at 6 mg, in clinical practice, it is commonly tapered to the lowest effective dose. Cessation of maintenance therapy can be considered after 6 to 12 months."
I am currently on the following budesonide taper schedule, approved by my GI doctor:
- 8 weeks, 3 pills per day
- 8 weeks, 2 pills per day (I'm in the eigth week of this)
- 8 weeks, alternating 2 and 1 pills per day
- 8 weeks, 1 pill per day
- 8 weeks, 1 pill every other day
- after those 40 weeks, listen to my body and try to taper completely off
I had one watery diarrhea day during the 3 pill per day period. I associated it with some possible old and spoiled deli turkey I had eaten the previous day, but I don't really know. In general, I have formed bowel movements (Bristol #4's), but there are random swings toward looseness and occasionally mild constipation, possibly due to diet, unknown microbes, weather, who knows. I seem to be able to eat anything, but I'm staying strictly low fiber, no caffeine, and low lactose and gluten.
I'm sticking with this long, slow taper come hell or high water, and I'm hoping things work out well at the end. I won't consider myself in remission until six successful months after the taper, especially since it's during that time I'll experiment more with diet. So it will be a long time before I can claim victory or failure with budesonide.