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Prednisolone/Prednisone
Revised: August 20, 2024
Published: January 01, 2001

(For veterinary information only)

WARNING
The size of the tablet/medication is NOT an indication of a proper dose. Never administer any drug without your veterinarian's input. Serious side effects or death can occur if you use drugs on your pet without your veterinarian's advice. 

It is our policy not to give dosing information over the internet.

Prednisolone is available in 5 mg & 20 mg tablets

Prednisone is available in 1 mg, 2.5 mg, 5 mg, 10 mg, 20 mg, & 50 mg tablets; oral syrup

Uses of This Medication

Prednisone and prednisolone are members of the glucocorticoid class of hormones. This means they are steroids, but unlike the anabolic steroids heard about in sports medicine, these are catabolic steroids. Instead of building the body up, they break the body down. In other words, they are designed to break down stored resources (fats, sugars, and proteins) so that they may be used as fuels in times of stress. 

Glucocorticoid hormones are produced naturally by the adrenal glands to prepare us metabolically for physical exercise and stress. Cortisone would be an example of a related hormone with which most people are familiar.

Despite the body's natural use for glucocorticoids, these hormones are rarely used for their influences on glucose and protein metabolism. Instead, they are used mostly because they are also the most broadly anti-inflammatory medications available. On top of that, at higher doses, they are not just anti-inflammatory but actually immune-suppressive. Their uses fit into several groups:

  • Anti-inflammatory (especially for joint pain and itchy skin).
  • Immune-suppression (for conditions where the immune system is destructively hyperactive).
  • Cancer chemotherapy (especially in treating lymphoma and mast cell tumors).
  • Central nervous system disorders (usually after trauma or a disk episode to relieve swelling in the brain or spinal cord, or more chronically, such as a brain tumor).
  • Blood calcium reduction (in medical conditions where blood calcium is dangerously high, treatment is needed to reduce levels to normal).
  • Prednisone can also be used for its ability to mobilize sugar in the treatment of insulin-secreting tumors or metabolic conditions associated with low blood sugar.
  • Prednisone is used as replacement therapy when a patient is not producing adequate glucocorticoid hormones on their own (as in Addison's disease, hypoadrenocorticism)

The patient's liver activates prednisone to prednisolone. In general, these medications are considered interchangeable in dogs, but cats seem to have less efficient activation mechanisms. These factors, plus general availability issues with manufacturers, have contributed to recent increases in the use of prednisolone over prednisone.

Side Effects

Prednisone and prednisolone have activity in the kidney that leads to conserving salt. This creates the classical side effects of prednisone/prednisolone use: excessive thirst and excessive urination. If this occurs, another steroid can be selected, or the prednisone/prednisolone dose can be dropped. The increased salt retention could be a problem for patients with congestive heart failure.

Prednisone and prednisolone are commonly used for several weeks or even months at a time to get a chronic process under control. The dose should be tapered to an every-other-day (or less) schedule once the condition is controlled because the body will perceive these hormones and not produce any of its own. In time, the adrenal glands will atrophy so that when the medication is discontinued, the patient will be unable to respond to any stressful situation. A blood sugar crisis can result. Using the medication every other day allows the body's own adrenal glands to remain active.

Any latent infection can be unmasked by prednisone use. (Feline upper respiratory infections would be a classical example. When a cat's upper respiratory symptoms resolve, the virus is not gone; it is just dormant. Glucocorticoid use could bring the infection out again.)

Long-term prednisone/prednisolone use is associated with an increased risk for latent bladder infection, especially in dogs. Upper respiratory infections and even bladder infections are usually readily controlled. If there is a more serious infection, such as an internal fungal infection, corticosteroids could bring it out, leading to a potentially life-threatening situation.

Glucocorticoids such as prednisone/prednisolone can induce labor in pregnant animals.

Glucocorticoids will interfere with intradermal skin testing for allergy as well as with thyroid function testing.

Glucocorticoid hormone use can be irritating to the stomach and GI tract at higher doses. Bleeding and ulceration can occur. If your pet becomes listless, loses appetite, develops vomiting, or develops a dark tarry stool, inform your veterinarian immediately.

At high enough doses, prednisone/prednisolone creates a state of higher-than-normal blood sugar levels. It is possible for a patient on the verge of developing diabetes mellitus to be tipped into a diabetic state.

This is usually a concern with the use of stronger steroid hormones, but it is still a potential to consider. One would definitely want to avoid using prednisone/prednisolone in a patient with existing diabetes mellitus or in patients that were once diabetic and are presently in diabetic remission.

Panting (in dogs) is a well-described side effect.

Glucocorticoids can increase appetite and are sometimes used for their appetite-stimulating properties. They also raise blood cholesterol levels and increase circulating fats.

Interactions with Other Drugs

Glucocorticoid hormones should not be used in combination with medications of the NSAID class (i.e., aspirin, carprofen, deracoxib, etc.) as the combination of these medications could lead to bleeding in the stomach or intestine. Ulceration could occur.

Furosemide, a diuretic, combined with prednisone/prednisolone, can lead to significant depletion of potassium.

Concerns and Cautions

The goal in therapy with glucocorticoids is to find the lowest effective dose. This usually means gradually tapering the frequency of administration and/or dose of medication over time until the lowest effective dose is determined.

Prednisone and prednisolone are considered to be intermediate-acting steroids, meaning that a dose lasts about a day or a day and a half. After two weeks or more of use, it is important to taper the dose to an every-other-day schedule to keep the body's own cortisone sources able and healthy.

The same salt retention that accounts for excessive thirst and urination may also be a problem for heart failure patients or other patients who require sodium restriction.

  • Diabetic patients should never take this medication unless there is a life-threatening reason why they must.
  • Glucocorticoid hormones can cause abortion in pregnant patients. These hormones should not be used in pregnancy.

Prednisone/prednisolone use is likely to change liver enzyme blood testing and interfere with testing for thyroid diseases.

When prednisone/prednisolone is used routinely, serious side effects would not be expected.

When doses become immune-suppressive (higher doses), or use becomes chronic (longer than four months at an every-other-day schedule), the side effects and associated concerns become different. In these cases, monitoring tests may be recommended or, if possible, another therapy may be selected.

Store prednisone/prednisolone tablets at room temperature, protected from light.

If a dose is accidentally skipped, do not double up on the next dose. Do not abruptly discontinue this medication; expect a tapering schedule.

See more about chronic steroid use and steroid alternatives for itchy skin.

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The information contained here is for general purposes only and is not a substitute for advice from your veterinarian. Any reliance you place on such information is strictly at your own risk.

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