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Updated: January 25, 2026

What Is Millipred? Uses, Dosage, and What You Need to Know in 2026

Author

Peter Daggett

Peter Daggett

Large medication capsule with information icon and educational elements

What is Millipred? Learn everything about this prednisolone brand — what it treats, how it's dosed, what to expect, and key safety information for 2026.

Millipred is a brand-name formulation of prednisolone — one of the oldest and most widely used corticosteroids in medicine. Whether you've just been prescribed it or are researching it for a family member, here's everything you need to know about Millipred in plain language.

What Is Millipred?

Millipred is a brand name for prednisolone, a synthetic corticosteroid. It comes in two forms:

Millipred tablets (prednisolone USP, 5 mg) — scored, round, peach-colored tablets

Millipred oral solution (prednisolone sodium phosphate, 10 mg/5 mL) — a dye-free, pale yellow grape-flavored liquid

Prednisolone has been FDA-approved since 1955 and belongs to a class of medications called corticosteroids (or glucocorticoids). It mimics cortisol, a hormone your body naturally produces to regulate inflammation and immune response.

What Does Millipred Treat?

Millipred is used for a remarkably wide range of conditions. It can be prescribed for acute (short-term) situations like allergic reactions and inflammatory flares, or for chronic conditions requiring long-term management:

Respiratory conditions: Asthma flares, croup (in children), severe allergic reactions, sarcoidosis

Rheumatic diseases: Rheumatoid arthritis, psoriatic arthritis, ankylosing spondylitis, gout flares, bursitis, tendinitis

Autoimmune diseases: Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), polymyalgia rheumatica, vasculitis, autoimmune hepatitis

Skin conditions: Severe psoriasis, pemphigus, contact dermatitis, severe eczema, urticaria

Eye conditions: Uveitis, iritis, allergic conjunctivitis, optic neuritis

GI and kidney conditions: Ulcerative colitis, Crohn's disease, nephrotic syndrome (especially in children)

Blood disorders: Immune thrombocytopenia (ITP), hemolytic anemia, certain leukemias and lymphomas

Neurological: Acute exacerbations of multiple sclerosis (200 mg/day for 1 week, then tapering)

Millipred Dosage: What's Typical?

Prednisolone dosing is highly individualized. There is no single 'standard dose' — your doctor determines the right dose based on your condition, its severity, and your response to treatment:

Adults: Initial doses typically range from 5 mg to 60 mg per day as a single dose or in divided doses. The lowest effective dose is always preferred.

Children: Typically 0.14–2 mg/kg/day or 4–60 mg/m²/day in 3–4 divided doses, depending on the condition.

Duration: Short courses (3–14 days) for acute conditions; longer courses for chronic conditions at the lowest effective maintenance dose.

How to Take Millipred

Take with food or milk to reduce stomach upset.

Take in the morning when possible — this aligns with the body's natural cortisol peak and minimizes sleep disruption.

Your doctor may prescribe it once daily, multiple times daily, or every other day depending on your condition.

Never stop prednisolone abruptly after more than 1–2 weeks of use — always follow your doctor's tapering instructions.

Is Millipred a Controlled Substance?

No. Prednisolone is not a controlled substance. There is no DEA schedule, no special prescribing restrictions, and no limits on pharmacy dispensing. Any licensed prescriber can write a prescription, and it can be filled at any standard pharmacy.

Who Should Not Take Millipred?

Prednisolone is contraindicated in people with:

Active systemic fungal infections

Known hypersensitivity to prednisolone or any ingredient in the formulation

Use with extra caution in patients with diabetes, hypertension, osteoporosis, active infections, GI ulcer disease, or psychiatric conditions. Always inform your doctor of your complete medical history before starting prednisolone.

Want to understand how Millipred actually works in your body? Read how Millipred works (mechanism of action explained). For a deeper look at side effects, see Millipred side effects: what to expect.

Frequently Asked Questions

Millipred is a brand name for prednisolone. Prednisolone is the active ingredient, available under multiple brand names (Millipred, Orapred, Prelone, Pediapred) and as generics. All contain the same active ingredient and work the same way — the differences are primarily in formulation and inactive ingredients.

Millipred (prednisolone) is prescribed for a wide range of inflammatory and autoimmune conditions including asthma, allergic reactions, arthritis, lupus, inflammatory bowel disease, certain skin conditions, nephrotic syndrome (in children), blood disorders, and acute MS exacerbations. It is also used for croup in children.

They're related but not identical. Prednisolone (Millipred) is the active form of the drug. Prednisone is a prodrug that the liver converts into prednisolone before it works. For most patients with normal liver function, they're clinically equivalent at the same dose. Prednisolone is preferred for patients with significant liver disease.

Prednisolone begins working within hours of taking it. For acute conditions like allergic reactions or asthma flares, noticeable improvement is often seen within 24–48 hours. For chronic inflammatory conditions, it may take a few days to see the full anti-inflammatory benefit.

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