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3 answers

Of course. Much of the weight gain is fluid, regardless the additional weight will have to be lost the old fashioned way, through diet and exercise. One thought, although diet and exercise are essential, the first step is having the prednisone dose decreased or stopped altogether.

The weight gained is through increased visceral and truncal fat deposition, the hardest to lose, but most important because this fat is the most dangerous to health, especially in men.

I did a rather extensive Internet search and it's difficult because of all the sites devoted to anabolic steroids. Proper sleep is very important regarding steroid weight loss. I've listed a website below that talks about this subject and recommends some ways to combat this type of weight gain. I hestitate to do so, but any info is better than none.

I hope this helps.

Rick the Pharmacist

2007-03-16 09:09:06 · answer #1 · answered by Rickydotcom 6 · 6 1

I took prednisone from 12/2005 - 6/2006. I haven't shed a pound. I started running, low-calorie dieting, low carb...nothing worked.

The only thing that started me to losing a slight amount of weight was starving myself for days on end.

2007-03-16 08:41:04 · answer #2 · answered by FavoredbyU 5 · 0 0

You may now have Cushing's syndrome.
It is so hard to lose any weight with this disease regardless of what you do.

www.cushings-help.com
Hope that helps.

2007-03-16 16:02:30 · answer #3 · answered by Cammie 7 · 0 0

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