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Search results for: environment

Genetics Suggest Adult & Child Arthritis Aren’t So Different

Kurt Ullman  |  April 26, 2018

There has long been a wall separating adult rheumatologists from pediatric rheumatologists. A recent review article published in the January edition of Arthritis & Rheumatology (A&R) suggests that genetics, rather than age, may be a better way to categorize forms of primary inflammatory arthritis across the lifespan.1 “Pediatric and adult rheumatologists don’t generally interact that…

Filed under:Conditions Tagged with:adult arthritisArthritisJuvenile arthritispediatric arthritis

New Study Examines Treatment Options for Incomplete Lupus Erythematous

Catherine Kolonko  |  April 26, 2018

A recent study explored medical concerns for patients who have lupus markers, but fall short of meeting enough criteria for official disease classification. Investigators at the Oklahoma Medical Research Foundation conducted a large study to explore current treatments of patients with incomplete lupus erythematous (ILE) and to compare antibody characteristics to healthy people and patients…

Filed under:Systemic Lupus Erythematosus Tagged with:Incomplete Lupus ErythematousLupusSLEsystemic lupus erythematous

How & Why Attending Physicians Should Teach in Patient Rooms

Bharat Kumar, MD, MME, FACP, FAAAAI, RhMSUS  |  April 26, 2018

No matter where you practice, rheumatology clinics are extremely busy. And in that hustle and bustle we find an uncomfortable jostling of priorities between delivering optimal care for as many patients as possible and upholding education for teachers and learners at all levels. Because salary usually comes from seeing more and more patients, teaching is…

Filed under:Education & Training Tagged with:communicationEducationfellowmedical studentphysicianresidencyrheumatologistrheumatologyTraining

ACR Named a Top Atlanta Workplace for 2nd Consecutive Year

Susan Bernstein  |  April 11, 2018

In a designation based on employee opinion, the ACR has been named one of the top places to work in Atlanta for the second year in a row. The honor is “a testament to the supportive and enthusiastic environment that we foster,” says ACR Executive Vice President Mark Andrejeski…

Filed under:From the College Tagged with:AC&RAmerican College of Rheumatology (ACR)workplace

The Smartphone as Diagnostic Tool

Larry Beresford  |  March 19, 2018

SAN DIEGO—Increasingly, technological advances are placing new tools into the hands of office-based rheumatologists. And they don’t have to cost a lot in capital equipment outlays by the medical group, because some of the best advances can be accessed via the device that is already in most doctors’ pockets, their smartphone. Smartphone technology gets more…

Filed under:Meeting ReportsTechnology Tagged with:ACR/ARHP Annual Meetingsmartphone

Professor Shares Findings from 45 Years of Lupus Research

Susan Bernstein  |  March 18, 2018

SAN DIEGO—What are the predisposing genes that suggest who will develop active systemic lupus erythematosus and who will stay healthy? Decades of research data help rheumatologists clarify this picture, says Argyrios N. Theofilopoulos, MD, professor of immunology and microbiology at Scripps Research Institute in La Jolla, Calif. At his Nov. 5 lecture at the 2017…

Filed under:Meeting ReportsSystemic Lupus Erythematosus Tagged with:ACR/ARHP Annual MeetingLupusPathogenesisSLE

Rheumatologist Fellow Works in India Via ACR Exchange Program

Rajat Bhatt, MD  |  March 17, 2018

In November 2017, I went to Lucknow, India, where I would spend my time as an exchange fellow at the Sanjay Gandhi Postgraduate Institute of Medical Sciences (SGPIMS) as part of the ACR International Visiting Fellows Exchange Program. Where I Come From I completed my medical degree at Mahatma Gandhi Missions Medical College, Navi Mumbai…

Filed under:Career DevelopmentPractice Support Tagged with:International Visiting Fellows Exchange Program

How to Attract Medical Students & Rheumatology Candidates

Karen Appold  |  March 12, 2018

As the shortage of rheumatologists is expected to worsen, practices and fellowship programs are asking how to attract top talent. Here are tips for how individuals can raise rheumatology’s profile and reach out to med students and new rheumatologists…

Filed under:Practice SupportWorkforce Tagged with:candidateemployeesFellowsmedical studentsmedical workforcepractice managment

Lyme Disease Spreads Through Ontario

Lara C. Pullen, PhD  |  March 5, 2018

New research highlights the current geographic areas of Ontario, Canada, associated with Lyme disease and the presence of Ixodes scapularis. The study found the ticks are expanding their range at a rate of 46–55 km/year, with several sites showing the presence of Borrelia burgdorferi, which causes Lyme disease. These findings may help target public health interventions in the areas at greatest risk…

Filed under:Conditions Tagged with:CanadaLyme DiseaseTick-Borne DiseaseTick-Borne Illnessticks

DADA2 Research Reveals Mechanisms & Possible Gene Therapy

Thomas R. Collins  |  February 18, 2018

SAN DIEGO—An increasing number of patients is being identified with deficiency of adenosine deaminase type 2 (DADA2); fortunately, researchers and clinicians continue to better understand the genetic disease as well, experts said in a session at the 2017 ACR/ARHP Annual Meeting Nov. 3–8. The childhood-onset disease involves loss-of-function mutations to the CECR1 gene (i.e., cat…

Filed under:Meeting ReportsResearch RheumVasculitis Tagged with:ACR/ARHP Annual Meetingadenosine deaminase 2DADA2gene therapygenetic disease

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