Prednisone is a synthetic corticosteroid drug which is usually taken orally and can be used for a large number of different conditions. It has a mainly glucocorticoid effect. Prednisone is a prodrug that is converted by the liver into prednisolone, which is the active drug and a steroid.
Uses
Prednisone is particularly effective as an
immunosuppressant and affects virtually all of the immune system. It can therefore be used in
autoimmune diseases, inflammatory diseases (such as
asthma, severe
poison ivy, and
Crohn's disease), various kidney diseases including
nephrotic syndrome, and to prevent and treat
rejection in
organ transplantation.
History
Prednisone was invented in the early 1950s when Arthur Nobile (1920 - 2004) at Schering demonstrated that the side effects of
cortisone such as water retention, high blood pressure and muscle weakness could be removed by oxidisation of the drug through exposure to microbes. The drug was introduced by Schering in the mid-1960s.
Dependency
Adrenal suppression occurs if prednisone is taken for longer than seven days, a condition which means the body is unable to synthesise natural corticosteroids and becomes dependent on the prednisone taken by the patient. For this reason, prednisone should not be stopped abruptly if taken for longer than seven days, but needs to be reduced slowly; this reduction may be over a few days if the course of prednisolone was short, but may take weeks or months if the patient has been on long-term treatment. Abrupt withdrawal will lead to an
Addisonian crisis, which may be life-threatening.
Side effects
Short-term side effects, as with all glucocorticoids, include high blood
glucose levels, especially in patients who already have
diabetes mellitus or are on other medications that increase blood glucose (such as
tacrolimus), and
mineralocorticoid effects such as fluid retention. Additional short-term side effects include
insomnia and rarely
mania. Long-term side effects include
Cushing's syndrome, weight gain,
osteoporosis,
glaucoma, type II
diabetes mellitus, and
depression upon withdrawal.
Minor
Major
External links
Glucocorticoids | Immunosuppressive agents
Prednison | Prednisone | Prednison | prednizón