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It was not inhaled, it was a pill bottle and it looked like 20mg's. I will see if I can find the pic (it was 3 pill bottles and some allergy over the counter meds found in the truck) I'm not even sure there were pills in it... or when he was taking them, I'm just saying from experience, it's possible... and IMO some doctor's suck, they don't warn about side effects or look at med's causing symptoms that present. JMO
I disagree about the wooziness. Headaches and dizziness are a very common side effect. If staying on it long term, they can subside, but for some it never does. A lot depends on dosage as well, but almost every person I have come in contact with (and it's A LOT), the most common side effect that everyone gets, is that. I wouldn't say it energizes someone, although it may depending on the reason it's taken, it actually causes insomnia and will cause a lack of sleep, which causes a lack of concentration, etc. It is a wonderful drug, used for many diseases, however, the long lasting side effects from it suck!!!
My husband has had Crohn's disease for 30 years. Prednisone is the go to drug for anyone with Crohn's/Colitis when they walk into an ER, we have a large online support community, everyone dreads the 'prednisone' fix.
Missy, I think I didn't explain what I meant about "energizing" very well. It does cause euphoria, as well as the insomnia that you stated. It's the combination of that that I was trying to describe.
Also, I did some more looking and it is true: Steroids can cause both dizziness ("wooziness") and muscle weakness. I was aware of the muscle weakness, but only associated it with high dose/chronic, regular use. I still am of the idea that that is the case. I just didn't think he would be on either. However, I suppose we just don't know for sure if that is the case here.
So, yes, I do think the Predisone could have been causing his symptoms, but I still think it pretty unlikely, unless he had been taking it for a long time. Often, it would be prescribed in an asthmatic as a short course, to get an acute bout under control. However, we can't know for sure.
What makes me doubt this Prednisone theory, is that his symptoms had been going on for quite some time -I believe he was hospitalized in October or thereabouts. I'll have to go back over what must be thousands of posts to find this! If I have non-Prednisone-induced insomnia tonight, I'll surely do so. When he was hospitalized, at any rate, they apparently did "some tests" and couldn't find anything. In that case, one of the very first things that would have been done would have been to consider his medications. They would have done metabolic-type of tests, looked at medications, and considered stress. What they wouldn't have done, would have been to test for poisons. Likely, not finding anything on tests, they gave him something for the short-term, discharged him, and told him to make an appointment with his MD if he had continued symptoms.
These are my thoughts on it, and perhaps the timeline is too long for the poisoning theory. Perhaps just stress? I will say this: Early on when they were still missing, Patrick dismissed the idea that Joey has terribly stressed-out. Flat out denied it. Joey had a lot going on, but had just moved into a great house that they seemed to love, had a lovely family, and the business was picking up. Why would he be that stressed?
Why would Chase be poisoning him at that point? It's way before he would have caught wind of the changing times with the Joey McStay-Chase Merritt "partnership", isn't it?
Interestingly, the symptoms, apparently, continued right on into February, because I believe that the time he had to pull over onto the side of the road because of them, and called his mother at the time, was in early February. Do you know?