How to Use Anti-Malarial Drugs to Treat Lupus
Instructions
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Use your anti-malarial drugs as directed by your doctor. These drugs are usually available in pill form and are often required to be taken with a glass of milk. Milk coats your stomach and helps treat nausea from the medication, although taking the medication with food is also an option.
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Wait several weeks to feel the benefits of the treatment. The anti-malarial drugs need this time to build up in your system. There is a typical loading period of one to two weeks while your body adjusts to the medicine.
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See if your swellings are going down. Anti-malarial drugs have some effects similar to anti-inflammatory medicine. You should be able to notice if your joint swelling caused by lupus has reduced significantly.
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Notice if sunlight causes your lupus symptoms to worsen. Sunlight is an environmental trigger for many people's lupus symptoms. Anti-malarial drugs help protect your skin from ultra violet light. You should be more tolerant to sunlight after treating lupus with anti-malarial drugs.
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See if your lupus swelling flare-ups occur less frequently. Anti-malarials block the production of some antibodies. These cells are typically those that attack your tissues and organs if you have lupus. Anti-malarials should help prevent frequent flare-ups of lupus swellings.
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Learn more about the possibilities for lupus treatment with anti-malarial and other drugs at the Lupus Foundation of America. See the Resources section below for a link.
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