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Tips for Addressing Leg Length Discrepancy in Osteoarthritis

Abdollah Shams-Pirzadeh, MD, PA, FACR, & Kimberly Retzlaff  |  January 20, 2021

Humans are not perfectly symmetrical. Almost everyone has one ear that’s higher or one foot that’s larger than the other. Similarly, leg lengths are often not quite the same. There is disagreement as to what constitutes a clinically significant difference, but some studies suggest that leg length discrepancy (LLD) can lead to osteoarthritis (OA) of…

A Pandemic of Psychological Distress Is Upon Us

Tamar Rubinstein, MD, Natoshia Cunningham, PhD, & Andrea Knight, MD, MSCE  |  January 20, 2021

It is nine months into the COVID-19 pandemic in the U.S. and the third wave is upon us, overwhelming hospital systems in many states across the country. But the alarms are being sounded for another looming pandemic as well. As early as spring 2020, significant increases were documented in the prevalence of depression and anxiety,…

COVID-19 Vaccines: Implications for Rheumatology Practice & Research

Larry Beresford  |  January 19, 2021

In late December, the ACR convened a COVID-19 Vaccine Consortium via a conference call to consider rheumatology’s place in the massive worldwide effort to develop, test, deliver and further study the vaccines promising to bring the historic pandemic under control.

Winter 2021’s Awards, Appointments & Announcements in Rheumatology

Gretchen Henkel  |  January 19, 2021

New Appointments for Carlos Lozada, MD In the midst of the coronavirus pandemic, Carlos J. Lozada, MD, FACP, FACR, professor of clinical medicine, University of Miami Miller School of Medicine, has expanded his professional and volunteer duties. In May he was appointed chief (interim) of the Division of Rheumatology at the Miller School of Medicine,…

Rheum After 5: Introducing Dr. Grayson & the Affordable Rock ‘n’ Roll Act

Carol Patton  |  January 19, 2021

Peter Grayson, MD, MSc, a tenure track investigator at the National Institutes of Health (NIH) Intramural Research Program, Bethesda, Md., sometimes wonders how his life would have turned out if the band he was playing in during college had signed a recording contract with a major record label. Dr. Grayson has been playing the piano…

Study Shows Psoriatic Arthritis Impacts Women More Than Men

Mary Beth Nierengarten  |  January 19, 2021

Psoriatic arthritis (PsA) has a higher life impact on women than men, suggesting the need to include life impact as part of the treat-to-target strategy for PsA. This is the finding of a recently published study by Orbai et al., which found female sex independently linked to high PsA life impact.1  The Study The study…

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Virtual Reality Therapy Is Feasible for Rheumatology Patients

Ruth Jessen Hickman, MD  |  January 19, 2021

A recent pilot study explores the feasibility of virtual reality-based pain interventions for people with rheumatic con­ditions.1 Although the work is in its early stages, it may someday represent a new non-pharmacological tool for patients with chronic pain. VR for Treatment R. Swamy Venuturupalli, MD, FACR, is an associate clinical professor of medicine at the…

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Case Report: Is It Reactive or IBD-Associated Arthritis?

Hanan Ibrahim, MD, Weixia Guo, MD, & Ayad Alkhatib, MD  |  January 19, 2021

Reactive arthritis is classically associated with an infectious etiology, such as Salmonella, Yersinia, Campylobacter, Chlamydia or gonorrhea. Clostridium difficile is a rare, and recently recognized, causative agent for this condition.1 Case Presentation The patient is a 21-year-old man with a past medical history significant for hereditary spherocytosis and Crohn’s disease, complicated by an anorectal fistula,…

Researchers Propose a Sensitive, Specific Biomarker for Rheumatoid Arthritis

Deborah Levenson  |  January 19, 2021

A proposed biomarker may improve the diagnosis of rheuma­toid arthritis (RA). Writing in Arthritis & Rheumatology, researchers at Pleasanton, Calif.-based Roche Sequencing Solutions and the University of Toronto say their biomarker, constructed by profiling a comprehensive set of antibodies via high-density peptide array, has high specificity and sensitivity for RA, compared with commercially available assays.1…

The Science of Empathy in Rheumatology

Leonard H. Calabrese, DO  |  January 19, 2021

Rheumatology has arguably benefited like no other field from the proliferation of an increasingly effective pipeline of therapeutics. These medications have dramatically raised the bar for clinical outcomes for our patients in a way that we could not have envisioned a short generation ago. With such therapeutic progress now reaching a widening circle of rheumatic…

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