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Search results for: corticosteroids

Anti-Interleukin-6 Therapy for Erdheim-Chester Disease Warrants Study

Stefanie D. Wade, MD, Michael A. Seidman, MD, Edward C. Jones, MD, Arnold Radu, MD, Ryan Paterson, MD, Vikram Deshpande, MD, John H. Stone, MD, & Mollie N. Carruthers, MD  |  February 16, 2017

Erdheim-Chester disease (ECD) is a rare, non-Langerhan’s cell histiocytosis characterized by tissue infiltration of CD68-positive and CD1a-negative foamy histiocytes.1 ECD was discovered as a lipid granulomatosis in 1930 by Jakob Erdheim and his pupil, William Chester, and approximately 500 cases have been described to date.1 ECD has a heterogeneous course and prognosis ranging from an…

Filed under:ConditionsOther Rheumatic Conditions Tagged with:anti-interleukincase reportClinicalDiagnosisDiseaseErdheim-ChesterinflammatoryinterferonPathogenesistherapyTreatment

Pediatric Rheumatology Research Highlights Successful Approaches to Manage Juvenile Rheumatic Diseases

Susan Bernstein  |  February 15, 2017

WASHINGTON, D.C.—Patients with juvenile rheumatic diseases are thriving in an era of highly effective therapies, successful self-management strategies, better understanding of genetic links to autoimmunity risk and improved efforts to listen to and engage with these young patients. That bright picture for young people with arthritis was presented by pediatrics at the ACR/ARHP Concurrent Abstract…

Filed under:ConditionsMeeting ReportsPediatric Conditions Tagged with:2016 ACR/ARHP Annual MeetingJuvenile idiopathic arthritisManagementoutcomepatient carePediatricrheumatologistrheumatologyTreatment

Potential New Maintenance Therapies for Vasculitides Revealed

Thomas R. Collins  |  February 15, 2017

WASHINGTON, D.C.—New insights into maintenance therapy for patients with vasculitides were covered by several speakers at the 2016 ACR/ARHP Annual Meeting abstract session titled, Vasculitis I: Novel Approaches to Therapy. Expert Hubert de Boysson, MD, MSc, of the Internal Medicine Department at Caen University Hospital in France, led discussion on new therapies for patients with…

Filed under:ConditionsMeeting ReportsResearch RheumVasculitis Tagged with:2016 ACR/ARHP Annual Meetingcentral nervous systemClinicalGiant Cell Arteritismaintenanceoutcomepatient careprimary angiitisResearchrheumatologistrheumatologyTakayasu’s ArteritistherapytocilizumabTreatmentvasculitidesVasculitis

When Interstitial Lung Disease and Connective Tissue Disorder Intersect in Rheumatology Patients

Larry Beresford  |  February 15, 2017

SAN FRANCISCO—Interstitial lung disease (ILD) represents a heterogeneous group of disorders characterized by inflammation or fibrosis of the lungs. The disorders are also associated with a spectrum of connective tissue diseases (CTDs). ILD is a common manifestation of CTDs, such as scleroderma, poly-/dermatomyositis and rheumatoid arthritis—and is a leading cause of morbidity and mortality in…

Filed under:ConditionsEducation & TrainingMeeting ReportsResearch Rheum Tagged with:Clinicalconnective tissue disorderDiagnosisinterstitial lung disorderpatient careResearchRheumatic DiseaserheumatologistrheumatologytherapyTreatment

ACR Recommends You Treat the Symptoms for Gout Patients

Bruce N. Cronstein, MD  |  February 15, 2017

In 1982, my wife (also a rheuma­tologist) and I attended our first American Rheumatism Association (now the ACR) national meeting. After the meeting we stayed with a friend in a suburb of Boston, where we also had the opportunity to meet our hostess’ in-laws, a retired general practitioner and his wife. When her father-in-law shook…

Filed under:ConditionsGout and Crystalline Arthritis Tagged with:ACPAmerican College of PhysiciansGoutguidelinepatient carePractice Managementrecommendationrheumatologysymptomtherapytreat-to-avoidTreat-to-Target

Baricitinib Is Effective in Patients Treated with DMARDs & Methotrexate

Lara C. Pullen, PhD  |  January 30, 2017

A recent analysis has examined the effectiveness of baricitinib in treating RA patients who suffer from comorbidities and the effect of concomitant use of steroids. Baricitinib proved effective, particularly in patients who had exposure to cDMARDs and corticosteroids…

Filed under:Drug Updates Tagged with:baricitinibDisease-modifying antirheumatic drugs (DMARDs)Janus Kinase InhibitorsMethotrexate

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Medical Paradoxes in Clinic, Lab Should Encourage Physicians to Reappraise Ideas about Health and Disease

Simon M. Helfgott, MD  |  January 19, 2017

Wash your hands. This most basic tenet of proper hygiene has been drummed into our heads for years. It’s an obvious infection prevention activity, yet for years, compliance among physicians and other caregivers has been lackluster. To rectify this matter, regulatory agencies began auditing hospital staff adherence to this axiom of infection prevention. Not only…

Filed under:OpinionResearch RheumRheuminationsSpeak Out Rheum Tagged with:clinicDietDiseaseDrugslaboutcomeparadoxpatient careResearchrheumatologistrheumatologySmoking

Gout Treatments Effective If Patients Maintain Lifelong Adherence to Therapies

Karen Appold  |  January 19, 2017

Although gout is one of the most effectively treated of all rheumatic diseases, it is among the worst-managed diseases long term, as shown by many studies. “Treatments are excellent, yet are dramatically under-utilized,” says Theodore Fields, MD, FACP, rheumatologist, Hospital for Special Surgery (HSS), New York. “This is because some gout patients feel better between…

Filed under:ConditionsGout and Crystalline ArthritisResearch Rheum Tagged with:ArthritisAssociation of Rheumatology Professionals (ARP)ClinicalGoutmaintenanceoutcomepatient careResearchtherapyTreatment

Pulse Therapy & Lupus Nephritis: A 40-Year History, 1976–2016

Morton Scheinberg, MD, PhD  |  January 17, 2017

Corticosteroids still represent the mainstay of treatment of patients with active disease. They have been used for more than 60 years, and although prolonged use is associated with organ damage, they have been shown to be lifesaving in various phases of the history of the disease. History of Use First introduced in the late 1960s…

Filed under:ConditionsOther Rheumatic Conditions

Rheumatology Case Report: Systemic Capillary Leak Syndrome and Rheumatoid Arthritis

Alexis Smith, MD, & Angus Worthing, MD, FACP, FACR  |  December 15, 2016

Systemic capillary leak syndrome (SCLS) is a very rare disorder, characterized by recurrent episodes of severe hypotension, hypoalbuminemia and hemoconcentration.1 Attacks of SCLS occur in three phases: 1) prodrome; 2) hypovolemia with weight gain; and 3) hypervolemia with fluid overload and polyuria often complicated by pulmonary edema. Often, compartment syndrome can lead to rhabdomyolysis as…

Filed under:ConditionsRheumatoid Arthritis Tagged with:case reportconditionsoutcomepatient careRheumatoid arthritisrheumatologysystemic capillary leak syndromeTreatment

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