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Search results for: fever

Lost and found

A Look Back at the First Use of Cortisone in Rheumatoid Arthritis

Ruth Jessen Hickman, MD  |  January 17, 2023

In 1949, the first description of patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) given cortisone sent shockwaves through the medical community, quickly capturing the public imagination as well. The paradigm-shifting report paved the way for the use of cortisone and related drugs in RA and many other medical conditions.1 The following is a discussion of some of…

Filed under:ConditionsRheumatoid Arthritis Tagged with:cortisoneLost & Found

The History of The Rheumatologist

Jason Liebowitz, MD, FACR  |  December 8, 2022

The Rheumatologist (TR) premiered in 2006, with its first full year of publication in 2007. In the 15 years since, it has sought to provide clinicians, researchers and healthcare providers with the most stimulating and educational content found in the field of rheumatology. The responsibility for achieving this mission has been borne by just three…

Filed under:From the CollegeProfessional Topics Tagged with:Physician EditorThe Rheumatologist

Highlights from the ACR Review Course 2022

Samantha C. Shapiro, MD  |  December 6, 2022

PHILADELPHIA—At ACR Convergence 2022, the much-anticipated ACR Review Course featured talks from eight experts. Topics reflected the heterogeneity of our field and included Sjögren’s disease, spondyloarthritis (SpA), osteoarthritis (OA), paraneoplastic rheumatic syndromes, metabolic bone disease, statin myopathy, Raynaud’s phenomenon and autoinflammatory syndrome. Here, I share highlights from this comprehensive, six-hour session. Sjögren’s Disease Sara S….

Filed under:ACR ConvergenceConditionsMeeting ReportsOsteoarthritis and Bone DisordersOther Rheumatic ConditionsSjögren’s Disease Tagged with:ACR Convergence 2022ACR Convergence 2022 – ASautoinflammatory diseasemetabolic bone diseaseosteoarthritis (OA)paraneoplastic rheumatic syndromesRaynaud’s phenomenonSjogren'sspondyloarthritis (SpA)statin myopathy

COVID-19: Strategies to Protect Adult & Pediatric Patients

Samantha C. Shapiro, MD  |  December 5, 2022

An ACR Convergence 2022 session provided practical updates on ways to best protect pediatric & adult patients with rheumatic disease from COVID-19.

Filed under:ACR ConvergenceConditionsMeeting Reports Tagged with:ACR Convergence 2022COVID-19outpatient

From Denial of Spondyloarthritis to a Support Group Leader & Medical Doctor of Rheumatology: A Patient’s Perspective

Shung Ming Chiu, MD  |  November 29, 2022

PHILADELPHIA—“My symptoms started in the final year of medical school, and at that stage I believed I was strong enough to fight my condition,” said Shung Ming Chiu, MD, in a poster presentation at ACR Convergence 2022. “Later, I realized that it’s not [about] fighting [but] rather accepting it and adapting to the new normal….

Filed under:ACR ConvergenceAxial SpondyloarthritisConditionsMeeting ReportsOpinionPatient PerspectiveSpeak Out Rheum Tagged with:ACR Convergence 2022ACR Convergence 2022 – ASpatient perspective

Is Gout an Autoinflammatory Syndrome After All?

Jason Liebowitz, MD, FACR  |  November 29, 2022

PHILADELPHIA—The term autoinflammatory syndrome was coined by Daniel L. Kastner, MD, PhD, National Institutes of Health (NIH), Bethesda, Md., not long after he discovered that mutations in the gene MEFV, which codes for the protein pyrin, are responsible for familial Mediterranean fever (FMF).1 Early on, the term was meant to signify monogenic conditions in which…

Filed under:ACR ConvergenceConditionsGout and Crystalline ArthritisMeeting Reports Tagged with:ACR Convergence 2022ACR Convergence 2022 – GoutGout

When Rheumatic Disease May Have Affected the Course of Western Civilization

Baljeet Rai, MD, Abhimanyu Amarnani, MD, PhD, Ja-Yoon Uni Choe, MD, Nicole K. Zagelbaum Ward, DO, MPH, & Richard S. Panush, MD, MACP, MACR  |  November 8, 2022

The study of rheumatology (and medicine) in art, history, literature and music is engaging and informative.1-12 In this article, we present some instances when rheumatic and autoimmune diseases in certain individuals may have affected the course of history in Western civilization. Physicians are usually concerned, appropriately, with the effects of illness on the lives of…

Filed under:OpinionProfessional TopicsSpeak Out Rheum Tagged with:History

Changing Treatment Patterns for Patients with JIA

Lara C. Pullen, PhD  |  October 18, 2022

A study from Glerup et al. demonstrated that many patients with juvenile idiopathic arthritis achieved drug-free remission over 18 years of follow-up and that remission rates remained stable between years 8 and 18 of the study period.

Filed under:ConditionsPediatric ConditionsResearch RheumRheumatoid Arthritis Tagged with:ChildrenILARJIAjuvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA)Pediatric

A Case of Nodular Rash & Painful Joints

Vania Lin, MD, MPH, Rebecca Johnson, MD, & Lisa Suter, MD  |  October 10, 2022

Polyarteritis nodosa (PAN) is a necrotizing vasculitis, predominantly involving medium-sized arteries, that causes systemic disease, and, less commonly, cutaneous-limited disease. The population prevalence for PAN ranges from 2 to 33 per million.1-3 Estimates vary due to the increased recognition and classification of other forms of vasculitides over time and variation in the regional prevalence of…

Filed under:ConditionsVasculitis Tagged with:case reportFellowsFellows Forumpolyarteritis nodosa

Case Report: CPPD Presenting as Pseudosepsis

Hassan Fakhoury, BS, Erin Chew, MD, & Narender Annapureddy, MBBS  |  September 6, 2022

Calcium pyrophosphate crystal deposition disease (CPPD) is an arthritis caused by the accumulation of calcium pyrophosphate crystals. Despite a prevalence of 4–7% among the adult population in Europe and the U.S., it has remained a relatively under-recognized disease owing to its many clinical presentations.1 CPPD may cause an acute mono/oligoarthritis, which may mimic gout or…

Filed under:ConditionsGout and Crystalline Arthritis Tagged with:calcium pyrophosphate deposition diseaseGoutpseudosepsisseptic arthritis

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