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Search results for: Gout

The 2016 ACR Award Winners Discuss Their Contributions to Rheumatology Research, Education, Patient Care

Richard Quinn  |  December 13, 2016

At the 2016 ACR/ARHP Annual Meeting in Washington, D.C., in November, the ACR and the ARHP honored a group of distinguished individuals who have made significant contributions to rheumatology research, education and patient care. In the November 2016 issue, we reported on the ARHP’s awards. This month, we speak with the ACR winners. Presidential Gold…

Filed under:Awards Tagged with:AC&RACR/ARHPAmerican College of Rheumatology (ACR)Awardsrheumatologywinner

Obesity & Rheumatic Disease

Richard Quinn  |  December 9, 2016

“Obesity is an inflammatory state, so it is in the landscape of the rheumatologist,” says Christopher Ritchlin, MD, MPH. And the more attention rheumatologists pay to obesity, the better…

Filed under:Conditions Tagged with:DietinflammationObesitypreventiveRheumatic Disease

RISE Registry Promises to Improve Care & Research for Rheumatology

Arthritis Care & Research  |  December 6, 2016

In 2014, the ACR launched the Rheumatology Informatics System for Effectiveness (RISE), a national electronic health record (EHR)-enabled registry. The goal: To help participating rheumatologists and practices leverage the new wave of big data created by the use of EHR, advance research and improve overall quality of care. A new analysis examines the RISE structure and the initial patient data collected by the registry…

Filed under:EMRsResearch RheumTechnology Tagged with:Arthritis Care & ResearchResearchRheumatoid Arthritis (RA)RISERISE registryTechnology

Ultrasound for Underserved Patients

Karen Appold  |  December 2, 2016

Beverly Johnson, MD, has experienced exactly how rheumatologists and their patients benefit from musculoskeletal ultrasound imaging for the diagnosis and treatment of autoimmune disease…

Filed under:Education & TrainingFacilityPractice Support Tagged with:clinicjoint imagingMusculoskeletal UltrasoundTrainingUltrasoundUltrasound School of North American Rheumatologists (USSONAR)

Effect of Diet & Sodium Intake on Serum Uric Acid

Arthritis & Rheumatology  |  November 29, 2016

Serum uric acid (UA) is an important factor in the causal pathway for gout. It has also been implicated as a potential risk factor and/or mediator of cardiovascular disease outcomes and mortality in a large number of observational studies. Although many of the clinical trials targeting serum UA reduction have focused on pharmacologic interventions, diet…

Filed under:ConditionsGout and Crystalline ArthritisResearch Rheum Tagged with:Arthritis & RheumatologyCardiovascular diseaseDASH dietDiethypertensionhyperuricemiaResearchUric acid

Veteran Rheumatologist Dr. Raymond Scalettar Recounts 60 Years of Practice, Growth of Specialty

Carol Patton  |  November 16, 2016

“Yes sir.” That was the response of Raymond Scalettar, MD, DSc, FACP, when his commanding officer told him the U.S. Army wanted him to switch specialties—from gastroenterology to rheumatology. There was only one problem. Dr. Scalettar wasn’t exactly sure what that would entail. That was the mid-1950s. Back then, rheumatology was barely out of the womb. Residency…

Filed under:Profiles Tagged with:CareerDr. Raymond ScalettarMilitaryPracticerheumatologistrheumatologyspecialty

Rheumatology Fellowship Work in Ethiopia Reveals Gaps in Practical Management of Rheumatic Diseases

Mary Abraham, MD, MBA, with Frehyiwot Ayele, MD  |  November 16, 2016

The first month of my last year of rheumatology fellowship began in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, at Black Lion Hospital, a tertiary university medical center, where I [Dr. Mary Abraham] started an Emory-sponsored global health rotation. Although a very different beginning to my fellowship year, my experiences at Black Lion reminded me of my passion to…

Filed under:Rheumatoid Arthritis Tagged with:Black Lion HospitalDr. Frehyiwot AyeleDr. Mary AbrahamEthiopiafellowshipInternationalpatient careresidentrheumatology

Treating the Athlete: New Thoughts on How to Prevent & Treat Arthritis in Athletes & Raise Their Awareness

Karen Appold  |  November 4, 2016

All athletes—amateur and professional—should understand their risks for developing injury-related arthritis. Rheumatologists and other physicians at the Hospital for Special Surgery in New York take a rapid approach to treating athletes, often considering intense physical therapy, innovative treatments and surgery much sooner than for the average patient—all to keep joints healthy and enable athletes to play for as long as possible…

Filed under:ConditionsOsteoarthritis and Bone Disorders Tagged with:Exercise/physical therapyinjuryphysical fitnessPhysical Therapysecukinumab

Tocilizumab Designated as Breakthrough Therapy for GCA

Michele B. Kaufman, PharmD, BCGP  |  October 26, 2016

To speed the development of tocilizumab to treat giant cell arteritis (GCA), the FDA designated it as a breakthrough therapy earlier this month…

Filed under:ConditionsDrug UpdatesGout and Crystalline Arthritis Tagged with:FDAFood and Drug AdministrationGiant Cell Arteritisgiant cell arteritis (GCA)Gouthyperuricemialesinuradtocilizumab

NYU Langone’s Division of Rheumatology in Manhattan Advances Its Mission to Understand Rheumatic Diseases, Improve Patient Outcomes

Gretchen Henkel  |  October 10, 2016

From its beginnings as the Rheumatic Diseases Study Group (RDSG) in the early 1930s, NYU Langone Medical Center’s Division of Rheumatology has been built on a tradition of research and clinical care. Today’s division, with 24 full-time and 76 part-time faculty members, continues to push toward understanding the pathogenesis of rheumatic diseases and interventions to…

Filed under:Education & TrainingProfilesResearch Rheum Tagged with:EducationgoalsManhattanNYU Langoneoutcomepatient careResearchRheumatic DiseaserheumatologistrheumatologyTraining

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