K.B.
Wow, they are having you give him the Orapred on a continuous basis? I can tell you that Dr. Portnoy won't agree with that. Once we went to go see him, we rarely used the oral steroids. When my daughter saw him, he set her up on a Green Zone, Yellow Zone and Red Zone course of action.
GREEN ZONE: Doing Well, No cough, wheeze, chest tightness or shortness of breath during the day or night
Can do usual activities.
YELLOW ZONE: Asthma Is Getting Worse
Cough, wheeze, chest tightness or shortness of breath, or
Waking at night due to asthma, or can do some but not all usual activities.
RED ZONE: Medical Alert! Very short of breath, or Quick-relief medicines have not helped, or
Cannot do usual activities, or Symptoms are same or get worse after 24 hours in Yellow Zone.
The red zone is where the oral steroids were prescribed to be used(orapred.) Since we were able to manage her symptoms almost consistently in the green and yellow range, we rarely had to resort to orapred.
Orapred is a serious steroid with some pretty crappy side effects. I called it "The Excorcist med" because my daughter just got freaky whenever she took it. There are even recommendations on tapering off of it. To the best of my recollection, I think they only had her on it for 3-5 days at a time, certainly not continuously.
Hang in there, Dr. Portnoy will be extremeley helpful!