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“Prednisone RUINED My Life!”

“Prednisone RUINED My Life!”

These are real comments. Real people from my channel.

Every week I read words like these. I get phone calls from people telling me the same story.

And I feel the same thing each time: This should not be happening.

Not because prednisone is evil—it saved my life. It’s saved millions of lives.

But because the people taking it were just handed a prescription and sent home with almost no information about how prednisone works and what the side effects are.

Nobody warned us what was coming or what we can do about it.

Today, I want to talk about both: what prednisone takes, why people think it ruined their life, and what—more than most people realize—can be restored.

Watch now!

The Four Losses: What “Prednisone Ruined My Life” Actually Means

When people say “prednisone ruined my life,” they’re describing several things that are happening—sometimes simultaneously, sometimes separately.

Let me name them. Because naming matters.

Once we name something, we can identify what it is and therefore identify a solution.

Loss #1: Your Identity

Prednisone changes so much about your identity.

It changes our face shape, creating moon face.

A formerly skinny person will suddenly gain 22 pounds—just like that—from the prednisone.

It changes your energy. Some people have low energy and are suddenly full of energy (and then it wears off). Others are just completely fatigued.

Prednisone can change your personality. Maybe you were previously outgoing and fun, and now you’re a recluse who doesn’t want to be around people.

Researchers call this “health-related quality of life impairment.”

Let me call it what it really is: This drug made you a stranger to yourself.

When you look at yourself in the mirror, you can’t recognize yourself.

Some describe it as: “I feel like I’m a passenger in someone else’s body.”

Loss #2: Your Mind

Prednisone crosses the blood-brain barrier. That means it’s directly affecting your mood, your memory, and your emotional regulation.

There’s actually a clinical diagnosis: steroid-induced psychosis and steroid-induced mood disorders.

Some patients have said they were actually misdiagnosed as having psychosis or bipolar disorder when it was actually a side effect of prednisone.

One specific patient said he was diagnosed with bipolar as a child and prescribed medications—but it was really just the prednisone side effect. He finally figured it out decades later after watching my video.

That’s not a personal failure. It’s not you. It’s the drug.

Loss #3: Your Relationships

Roid rage, mood swings, personality changes—they affect everybody in your household and your workplace.

Your family often doesn’t understand what changed.

I’ve had several people reach out to me saying: “I’ve had my children taken away. I’ve lost my driver’s license. I’ve lost my job”—because of their behavior while on high doses of prednisone that nobody understood until looking back.

And it’s like, “Oh, that’s why I was acting that way.”

But by then, it’s too late. The wife has filed for divorce.

One husband who had been on prednisone for 61 years (that’s almost as long as prednisone has been on the market) had to develop a formal protocol to use with his wife for when his emotions get out of control because of the prednisone.

He said: “It may not be my fault, but I’m still responsible for what I do.”

Sixty-one years. Still navigating this.

That’s not weakness. That’s extraordinary—that he’s taking that kind of responsibility and not just blaming it on the drug.

I mean, it is the drug’s fault. But he’s realizing he has to work within the world he lives in, which is: “I’m a person taking prednisone.”

Loss #4: Your Body

Prednisone causes muscle mass loss.

Prednisone causes bone loss.

Prednisone makes people lose their hair.

It affects your gut bacteria.

It can affect hormones.

I have one Prednisone Warrior who comments on this channel a lot. She was a professional dancer—thin, healthy, took care of herself, ate good food. She took prednisone for only nine days, and her period disappeared within 24 hours.

She never got it back.

A year and a half later: premature menopause. She’ll never have children. She celebrated her 39th birthday with that fact—that she’ll never be able to bear children.

I am sharing that because this woman’s pain is real.

And complicating that is she’s worried that the reason they gave it to her wasn’t even a legitimate diagnosis in the first place.

So the pain of losing her body, losing her ability to bear children, on top of the fact that maybe she shouldn’t have taken it at all—it’s just so much grief. So much to deal with.

Every week I read comments that have some variation of this in them. You’re not alone.

Real Stories from Real People

One person described gaining 70 pounds, being unable to exercise, and said that even showering hurts.

She said: “If I can complete a daily task, I’m doing good for the day.”

She was on prednisone for two years for COPD, and no one told her how bad long-term use can be.

That’s what prednisone does to muscles, joints, and metabolism when no one is managing the side effects along with the medication.

Another person wrote that after a single Kenalog injection—one injection for back pain—they were bedridden for 10 weeks with severe physical and mental symptoms. They didn’t know what to do.

People don’t realize that all forms of steroids—whether it’s the pill form of prednisone, injections, inhalers, nasal sprays, or creams—they all carry these risks.

Another Prednisone Warrior was given prednisone for a sinus infection. Not a life-threatening autoimmune condition like me—just a sinus infection. They probably shouldn’t have had it anyway.

And it sent them into psychosis.

Prednisone psychosis is real. It’s its own special diagnosis code.

And it almost never comes up in the prescribing conversation—especially for something as benign as a sinus infection.

What’s Actually Reversible (And What’s Not)

Now, I want to be clinically honest with you, because that’s what you deserve to know.

What is actually irreversible, permanent destruction caused by this drug?

And what is reversible—what will just go away eventually once you get on a lower dose or once you get off the medication?

The Good News: What Usually Reverses

1. Mood and Personality Changes

In most cases, these improve as the dose decreases.

The brain is remarkably adaptable, and the rage is not who you are. It’s just a drug side effect.

I’ve talked to a lot of people with mood and personality changes—and it can be dramatic changes—but it usually does go away.

The timing, though? That’s a struggle. I can’t tell you when that’ll happen.

2. Muscle Wasting

With the right nutrition and movement, your muscles can be gained back.

It takes longer than it should. And if you’re elderly and already dealing with sarcopenia from older age, it might be really difficult to gain it back.

But for most people, it will return.

3. Metabolic Changes

Blood sugar problems, weight gain, food cravings—these are driven by specific mechanisms that prednisone triggers.

When you understand the mechanism, then you can push back on it.

4. Sleep Disruption

Prednisone is a stimulant at the adrenal level, but there are real, research-backed strategies that can help.

And once you’re completely recovered from prednisone, your sleep pattern should go back to normal.

It just takes a lot longer than you might think.

The Hard Truth: What May Be Permanent

1. Bone Loss

This is the one doctors take the most seriously. They even created a guideline about it—they’re so worried about it.

It’s called the Glucocorticoid-Induced Osteoporosis Guideline by the American College of Rheumatology.

Every day on prednisone, more and more bone density is lost. And it doesn’t really come back.

That’s why I talk about bone health so often—because it’s a lot easier to stop the loss than to gain back what you did lose.

I want you to know about this because the window closes every day on bone loss. So the sooner you act on this, the better.

Just follow the guidelines of the American College of Rheumatology.

And because I feel so strongly about this—and there’s such solid research about it—I actually created a dietary supplement that follows those guidelines exactly.

It’s got a morning bottle and a bedtime bottle. Two capsules in the morning and two capsules at bedtime to support your bones. It also has ingredients that help support your mood, your muscles, and your metabolism to help you feel as stable as possible while on prednisone.

Learn more about Nutranize Zone here →

But bone loss is real. And the longer you wait to deal with it, the more irreversible loss you’ll have.

2. Adrenal Suppression

Also known as adrenal insufficiency.

If you’re on prednisone long-term, you’ve essentially told your body: “I don’t need you to make cortisol anymore.”

And so the part of your body called the adrenal gland (that sits right on top of your kidneys) basically starts wasting away. It starts shrinking because it has no job to do.

And that shrinkage can be permanent in a very small percentage of people.

Most people eventually get it back, but the recovery time is unpredictable and different for every single person.

I have a Cortisol Clarity Kit that you can order to see if your cortisol has recovered.

3. Hormonal Disruption

Not enough people are talking about what this can do, and it’s more rare.

The data on reproductive hormones, menopause cycles, and early menopause is really thin—because it’s really hard to research. People are taking prednisone for different reasons, at different doses, at different times in their life.

But it definitely affects estrogen, progesterone, testosterone, and other hormones that are derived from the same steroids that prednisone comes from.

So they all interact and interfere with each other—possibly.

The Restoration Framework: How to Get Your Life Back

If you feel like prednisone has ruined your life, you’re not alone.

But there are some things you can do to help recover.

What I teach—everything this channel is built around—is what I call the Restoration Framework.

This is restoring what prednisone takes.

Step 1: Restore the Nutrients

Specifically:

  • Calcium and vitamin D (leading to bone loss)
  • Chromium (leading to metabolism issues and moon face)
  • Melatonin and magnesium (leading to sleep issues and mood issues)

When you’re running on empty nutritionally, everything else gets harder.

It’s pretty hard to recover from prednisone when you’re like a wilted plant with no fertilizer.

And that’s exactly why I created Nutranize Zone. It helps restore that foundation so you have what you need to continue restoring what prednisone has stolen from you.

Step 2: Restore Your Information

Most people on prednisone were just given a prescription and sent home with no warning, no guidance, no knowledge of what to expect.

The single most powerful thing you can do is understand what’s happening inside your body because of this medication.

That’s why you’re reading this right now.

Step 3: Restore Your Advocacy and Confidence

You know your body better than your doctor.

You need to tell your doctor exactly how you’re feeling when things concern you.

And you need a doctor who is willing to:

  • Restore your bone density (and be checking it)
  • Restore your metabolism (and be checking it)
  • Monitor your adrenal function
  • Address your sleep

If that’s not happening, I want to help you ask for it.

Step 4: Restore Your Identity

This one takes the longest.

And there’s a reason I call people who take prednisone and watch this channel Prednisone Warriors.

It’s because you are fighting a battle that nobody can see—unless you get moon face.

No one else knows that you are taking a substance that will affect all of your body systems, with possibly 150 side effects or more.

And that makes you a warrior.

You’re courageous to do something like that—because you want to make sure something worse doesn’t happen.

Like for me: dying.

For you: maybe it’s being able to use your joints or being able to breathe.

But you are not your moon face. You are not your roid rage. You are not any of the side effects that happen to you.

You are just a person that the drug is acting on.

You’re still you behind all of that—even though it might be hard to see yourself in the mirror the way you currently look.

But that person is still there. And will come back.

You’re Not Alone

Prednisone may have changed your life. It may have taken things from you that feel impossible to get back.

But you are not your side effects.

You are not alone in this.

And there are real, evidence-based strategies to restore what prednisone has taken—starting with the nutrients your body desperately needs.

Start your restoration with Nutranize Zone →

Dr. Megan Milne, PharmD, BCACP

Dr. Megan Milne, PharmD, BCACP, is an award-winning clinical pharmacist board certified in the types of conditions people take prednisone for. Dr. Megan had to take prednisone herself for an autoimmune condition so understands what it feels like to suffer prednisone side effects and made it her mission to counteract them as the Prednisone Pharmacist.

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