Treating myositis
Exercise and physiotherapy
You must be very careful about exercising if you have severe symptoms of myositis, such as severe muscle pain and weakness. Most specialists don't recommend exercising during this period.
However, it's very important to maintain gentle muscle and joint movement, particularly in cases where myositis develops during childhood. This ensures that the joints which are moved by muscles don't become stiff and take on a fixed position.
As the condition is brought under control, a gentle exercise programme can be started and gradually increased following the advice of a physiotherapist.
Steroid medication
Steroids are the main type of medication used to treat polymyositis and dermatomyositis. They can include:
- steroid creams – which can be used to treat the affected areas of skin in dermatomyositis
- higher doses of steroid tablets if there's severe muscle weakness
High doses of steroids can cause side effects such as weight gain, high blood pressure, diabetes, cataracts (cloudy patches in the lens of the eye) and osteoporosis (weakened bones).
Read more about the side effects of steroid medication.
Disease-modifying anti-rheumatic drugs (DMARDs)
If the inflammation in your muscles flares up, your doctor may prescribe a disease-modifying anti-rheumatic drug (DMARD).
DMARDs, such as azathioprine, methotrexate, cyclophosphamide or mycophenolate suppress your immune system and help reduce inflammation.
These medications are slow to act, but in the long term may allow the dose of steroids to be reduced, along with their side effects.
Intravenous immunoglobulin therapy
Intravenous immunoglobulin therapy may be needed in very severe cases of myositis where severe muscle weakness is causing life-threatening breathing or swallowing problems.
It involves having an injection of normal antibodies from donated blood. This temporarily changes the way your immune system operates.
Intravenous immunoglobulin therapy can produce a rapid improvement in the symptoms of myositis, but it's very expensive and the benefits usually only last a few weeks.
Therefore, it isn't suitable as a long-term treatment, and is usually only used to treat people who are seriously ill while they're waiting for other treatments to work.
Biologic therapies
It's thought that biologic therapies, which are widely used to treat conditions such as rheumatoid arthritis and psoriatic arthritis, may also play a part in managing myositis in people whose symptoms don't respond to conventional steroids and immunosuppressive medication.
For example, rituximab is a biological medicine which helps reduce inflammation that's recently been approved for treating myositis. It's given by intravenous infusion (directly into a vein through an intravenous line, needle or catheter) on two occasions two weeks apart and may be repeated months or years later.