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Search results for: cardiovascular disease

Remission of Rheumatoid Arthritis Tied to Lower Risk of Metabolic Syndrome

Reuters Staff  |  June 12, 2016

NEW YORK (Reuters Health)—Disease remission in patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) is associated with a lower risk of developing metabolic syndrome, according to a new study from Thailand. Researchers also found that a lower educational level was linked to a higher risk of metabolic syndrome, they report in Joint Bone Spine, online May 26. Dr….

Filed under:ConditionsRheumatoid Arthritis Tagged with:metabolic syndromeRemissionRheumatoid Arthritis (RA)rituximab

Long-Term Therapy with Lilly Drug Found to Help Plaque Psoriasis

Gene Emery  |  June 8, 2016

NEW YORK (Reuters Health)—Aggregated results from three studies of patients with moderate to severe plaque psoriasis show that Eli Lilly’s injectable drug ixekizumab can completely resolve the plaques in about one third of cases after 12 weeks of treatment. And with continued therapy every four weeks, at least half maintained or attained complete resolution of…

Filed under:Drug Updates Tagged with:clinical trialsixekizumabplaque psoriasis

Many Medical Devices Hit the Market before Safety Studies Are Published

Madeline Kennedy  |  June 5, 2016

(Reuters Health)—Medical devices approved by the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) are often cleared before studies on their safety or effectiveness have been released to the public, a report suggests. Without published data, doctors and patients may not be able to make informed decisions about whether to use the products, the authors warn. The…

Filed under:Uncategorized

Baricitinib Has Promising Clinical Trial Results for Treating RA

Michele B. Kaufman, PharmD, BCGP  |  May 18, 2016

Recent clinical trials have shown that baricitinib is safe and effective for treating patients with rheumatoid arthritis who have proved non-responsive to multiple biologic treatments…

Filed under:Biologics/DMARDsDrug UpdatesRheumatoid Arthritis Tagged with:baricitinibclinical trialsJAK inhibitorsRheumatoid Arthritis (RA)

Cholesterol Levels in Patients with RA Starting Methotrexate

Arthritis & Rheumatology  |  February 25, 2016

Although research regarding the increased cardiovascular (CV) morbidity and mortality in rheumatoid arthritis (RA) has burgeoned in recent years, the need remains for a better understanding of the effects of widely used DMARDs on CV risk and risk factors in RA patients. These authors set out to evaluate the long-term changes in cholesterol levels in patients with early RA. Decreases in RA disease activity over long-term follow-up were associated with increases in cholesterol levels in patients with early RA treated with either biologic or nonbiologic therapies…

Filed under:ConditionsResearch RheumRheumatoid Arthritis Tagged with:Arthritis & RheumatologycholesterolMethotrexateResearchRheumatiod arthritistriple therapy

Hidradenitis Suppurativa Tied to Higher Mortality

David Douglas  |  February 24, 2016

NEW YORK (Reuters Health)—Hidradenitis suppurativa (HS) is associated with a significantly increased risk of adverse cardiovascular (CV) outcomes and all-cause mortality, according to Danish researchers. HS is a chronic, inflammatory skin disease and is most common in women. It is typically diagnosed after long delays, Dr. Alexander Egeberg of the University of Copenhagen and colleagues…

Filed under:ConditionsSystemic Sclerosis Tagged with:cardiovascularCardiovascular diseaseHidradenitis suppurativaPsoriasisskinskin inflammation

Dermatology & Immunology: Skin Issues Can Present Challenges

Thomas R. Collins  |  February 23, 2016

SAN FRANCISCO—A 40-year-old woman shows up in the clinic with scarring alopecia, with an area of hyperpigmentation on the rim of her scalp, extending from just behind the temple to behind her ears. An examination with a dermatoscope shows hyperkeratotic follicular plugging. The case—in this example, the discoid form of cutaneous lupus erythematosus (DLE)—is one…

Filed under:ConditionsMyositisSystemic Lupus Erythematosus Tagged with:2015 ACR/ARHP Annual MeetingDermatologydermatomyositisImmunologyLupusskin

American Physical Therapists Collaborate with Local PTs in Ethiopia

Mary E. Christenson, PT, PhD  |  January 19, 2016

Ethiopia has a rich, variable and distinguished history and landscape. Located in the Horn of Africa, it shares borders with Eritrea, Djibouti, Somalia, Kenya, Sudan and South Sudan. Ethiopia has claim to the oldest humanoid fossils, named “Lucy,” which were discovered in 1974 and are estimated to be 3.2 million years of age.1 The country’s…

Filed under:Profiles Tagged with:Ethiopiaglobalpatient carePhysical Therapy

Gene Manipulation Has Potential to Alter Genomes, Impact Society

Gene Manipulation Has Potential to Alter Genomes, Impact Society

Simon M. Helfgott, MD  |  January 19, 2016

Every so often, a major scientific breakthrough profoundly alters the trajectory of scientific research. In the 1960s, microbiologists sparked the recombinant-DNA revolution with the discovery that bacteria have innate immune systems based on restriction enzymes. These enzymes bind and cut invading viral genomes at specific short sequences, and scientists rapidly repurposed them to cut and…

Filed under:OpinionRheuminationsSpeak Out Rheum Tagged with:discoverygenegenomeimpactpublic healthscience

New Blood Thinner ‘Antidote’ to Help Doctors Move Past Warfarin

Bill Berkrot  |  December 28, 2015

NEW YORK (Reuters)—A new class of blood thinners that competes with widely used warfarin should get a boost next year when an “antidote” that can reverse the medications’ effects in an emergency is expected to enter the market, according to top U.S. heart doctors and investors. Xarelto, from Bayer AG and Johnson & Johnson, and…

Filed under:Drug Updates Tagged with:anticoagulantblood clotwarfarin

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