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Search results for: exercise

Duke Researchers Create a Type 1, Type 2 Lupus Disease Model

Catherine Kolonko  |  October 20, 2020

A new disease model for lupus tackles issues with fatigue and other serious conditions that, although quite common among patients, get less attention because they fall outside classic symptoms associated with inflammation, a debilitating force behind systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE). The model features subtypes to cate­gorize two main groups of symptoms into type 1, typically…

Filed under:ConditionsResearch RheumSystemic Lupus Erythematosus Tagged with:fatiguelupus disease modellupus subtypesSLE Resource Center

Rheumatology Health Educators Educate & Empower Patients

Linda Childers  |  October 19, 2020

As a health educator at Integrative Rheumatology, a private practice in Charlotte, N.C., Latisha Williams, MPH, CHES, CHC, works with patients to teach them how to better manage their disease. In the two-and-a-half years that Ms. Williams has worked at Integrative Rheumatology, she’s answered countless questions about exercise, nutrition and complementary therapies, among other topics. “Patients…

Filed under:Patient PerspectivePractice Support Tagged with:Association of Rheumatology Professionals (ARP)health educationpatient education

Reflections on Starting a Rheumatology Fellowship During the Pandemic

Nicole K. Zagelbaum Ward, DO, MPH, with Richard S. Panush, MD, MACP, MACR  |  October 19, 2020

Some have opined, cynically, that transformative changes will not come to medical education and training, and to healthcare, until pigs fly. Well, in 2009–10, “swine flu,” and now we are in the midst of an unprecedented and disruptive pandemic, affecting virtually all aspects of our lives, including fellowships.1 As someone who started a rheumatology fellowship…

Filed under:Education & TrainingProfessional Topics Tagged with:Fellows-in-Training

Arthroscopic Partial Meniscectomy Tied to Radiographic Knee OA

By Lisa Rapaport  |  September 29, 2020

(Reuters Health)—Patients with a degenerative meniscus tear who get arthroscopic partial meniscectomy have similar five-year outcomes and increased risk of radiographic knee osteoarthritis (OA) as without surgery, a small study suggests. Researchers in Finland randomly assigned 146 adults with degenerative meniscus tear confirmed by magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to receive either arthroscopic partial meniscectomy (APM)…

Filed under:ConditionsOsteoarthritis and Bone Disorders Tagged with:kneeKnee Osteoarthritis (OA)meniscal tearmeniscectomyPain

Sedentary Lifestyle Linked to Reduced Quality of Life in People with Knee OA

Mary Beth Nierengarten  |  September 21, 2020

Physical inactivity significantly affects disease burden and reduces the overall quality of life in patients with knee osteoarthritis (OA), according to a study from Losina et al. The researchers calculated the total quality-adjusted life-years lost for U.S. patients with OA due to inactivity.

Filed under:ConditionsOsteoarthritis and Bone DisordersResearch Rheum Tagged with:Arthritis Care & ResearchkneeKnee Osteoarthritis (OA)Osteoarthritis

ACR Convergence Offers Quick Reviews of Rheumatology Topics in Shorter, ‘Down & Dirty 30’ Sessions

Catherine Kolonko  |  September 9, 2020

Here’s a taste of what participants in this year’s virtual annual meeting, ACR Convergence 2020, will have access to during Down & Dirty 30, four 30-minute sessions designed to provide refreshers on specific rheumatology-related topics.

Filed under:ACR ConvergenceEducation & TrainingMeeting Reports Tagged with:ACR Convergence 2020ACR Convergence 2020 – RAEducation

Out-of-Pocket Costs for Patients with Rheumatic Diseases Skyrocket

From the College  |  September 4, 2020

An estimated one in four American adults live with a rheumatic disease, and according to a new national patient survey by the ACR, the healthcare and lifestyle challenges have become worse for these patients during the COVID-19 pandemic. Key survey findings include: Patients currently seeing a rheumatologist declined 52% between 2019 and 2020; 68% of…

Filed under:Professional Topics Tagged with:COVID-19patientrheumatologySimple Taskssurveytelehealthtelemedicine

Case Report: What’s Causing This Severe Case of Rhabdomyolysis?

Aditya S. Pawaskar, MBBS, MD, & Weishali V. Joshi, MD  |  August 12, 2020

Rhabdomyolysis is a clinical syndrome characterized by muscle tissue necrosis and release of intramuscular components into the circulation. Typical manifestations include muscle pain and myoglobinuria, causing dark urine. Serum creatinine kinase (CK) enzyme levels are usually markedly elevated. Severity can range from muscle enzyme elevation in the serum of an otherwise asymptomatic patient to extremely…

Filed under:Conditions Tagged with:hypopituitarismhypothyroidismrhabdomyolysis

A transverse view of the ulnar groove in full elbow extension. The red arrow indicates the advancing edge of the MHTr.

Recurrent Medial Elbow Pain Following Successful Tommy John Surgery

Mark H. Greenberg, MD, RMSK, RhMSUS, A. Lee Day, MD, RMSK, James W. Fant Jr., MD, & Christopher G. Mazoue, MD  |  August 12, 2020

A 27-year-old, left-handed man was referred to our ultrasound clinic for left elbow pain. History The patient had been a pitcher on a Minor League Baseball team. Two years before, he developed sudden, severe medial elbow pain while pitching in a game. The pain was associated with some tingling down the left medial forearm. The…

Filed under:Conditions Tagged with:case reportdiagnostic imagingelbow painTommy John Surgeryulnar nerveulnar nerve instabilityulnar nerve relocation syndromeultrasonographyUltrasound

Dorothy.Wedel / shutterstock.com

How Duke’s School of Medicine Implemented a Quality Improvement Curriculum

Lisa Criscione-Schreiber, MD, MEd, Ryan Jessee, MD, & David Leverenz, MD  |  July 15, 2020

It has been about 20 years since the Institute of Medicine (now the National Academy of Medicine) published the report To Err Is Human: Building a Safer Health System, shining light on the impact of medical errors in healthcare.1 In response to that publication, the focus on quality improvement (QI) started in the inpatient setting,…

Filed under:Education & TrainingPractice SupportQuality Assurance/Improvement Tagged with:curriculum

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