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An official publication of the ACR and the ARP serving rheumatologists and rheumatology professionals

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Search results for: fibromyalgia

A Peaceful Medical Mission in Guatemala, Days before COVID-19

Daniel F. Battafarano, DO, MACP, FACR  |  June 15, 2020

My first-ever medical mission trip, after 37 years of medical practice, was to Teleman, Alta Verapaz, Guatemala. Prior to the trip, my excitement as an adult-trained rheumatologist was balanced against my apprehension about witnessing new diseases, caring for children and practicing in an austere environment with limited medical resources. As directed by the travel clinic,…

Filed under:Career Development Tagged with:medical missionsVolunteering

Apremilast Most Helpful for Mild to Moderate Psoriatic Arthritis

Lara C. Pullen, PhD  |  May 18, 2020

Recent research examined the use of apremilast in patients with psoriatic arthritis using the Clinical Disease Activity in Psoriatic Arthritis (cDAPSA) measurement. The findings suggest patients with moderate disease activity at baseline benefit most from the treatment…

Filed under:ConditionsPsoriatic Arthritis Tagged with:apremilastcDAPSAClinical Disease Activity in Psoriatic Arthritis (cDAPSA)PsAPsoriatic Arthritis

Lemau Studio / shutterstock.com

Tips for Understanding the Pathways of Pain & Choosing Treatments

Carina Stanton  |  May 15, 2020

SNOWMASS VILLAGE, COLO.—The science underlying the neurobiology of chronic pain isn’t something rheumatologists often think about. However, pain is an important reason why patients see a rheumatologist. At the 2020 ACR Winter Symposium in January, Leslie Crofford, MD, gave two presentations addressing pain experienced by rheumatology patients, including a session on the fundamental mechanisms of…

Filed under:AnalgesicsConditions Tagged with:Pain Managementpain mechanismspain pathwaysWinter Rheumatology Summit

How to Leverage Patient-Reported Outcomes to Improve Care for SLE Patients

Lara C. Pullen, PhD  |  April 13, 2020

A recent study reinforces the growing understanding that the fatigue many SLE patients experience should be considered a lupus symptom. Researchers found that using patient-reported outcomes to identify type 2 symptoms of SLE may improve patient communication, understanding and overall care…

Filed under:ConditionsResearch RheumSystemic Lupus Erythematosus Tagged with:Arthritis Care & Researchfatiguelupus subtypespatient outcomesystemic lupus erythematosus (SLE)

Pearls & Myths: Experts Offer Advice & Dispel Myths

Thomas R. Collins  |  February 25, 2020

GCA, GPA, myositis, new research—rheumatology care keeps clinicians on their toes & requires them to stay up to date…

Filed under:CareerCareer DevelopmentMeeting ReportsProfessional Topics Tagged with:2019 ACR/ARP Annual Meeting

Tactics for Bolstering the Rheumatology Workforce

Mike Fillon  |  February 13, 2020

ATLANTA—The rheumatology profession faces a severe shortfall of practitioners that threatens the ability to address patients’ needs. “Even if we doubled the number of positions for fellowship training, we wouldn’t meet the increasing demand on our workforce,” said Marcy B. Bolster, MD, associate professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School, Boston, and director of the…

Filed under:Meeting ReportsPractice SupportWorkforce Tagged with:2019 ACR/ARP Annual MeetingAdvanced Practice Cliniciansnurse practitionerphysician assistanttelemedicineworkforce shortage

Remote Use of the Multidimensional Health Assessment Questionnaire (MDHAQ)

Juan Schmukler, MD, & Theodore Pincus, MD  |  December 18, 2019

The patient medical history is far more prominent in clinical decisions for rheumatology than for many common chronic diseases in which a gold standard biomarker, such as blood pressure or serum glucose, is applicable to diagnosis and management of all individual patients.1 Components of a subjective patient history may be recorded as structured, quantitative, standard,…

Filed under:ConditionsTechnology Tagged with:case reportMultidimensional Health Assessment Questionnaire (MDHAQ)Routine Assessment of Patient Index Data (RAPID)

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ACR Publishes Disease Activity and Functional Status Assessment Measure Recommendations for RA

Mary Beth Nierengarten  |  December 10, 2019

The recommendations include updated disease activity measures and a new set of functional status assessment measures for rheumatoid arthritis.

Filed under:Clinical Criteria/GuidelinesRheumatoid Arthritis Tagged with:disease activity measuresDr. Bryant EnglandDr. Claire BarberDr. Kaleb Michaudfunctional status assessment measuresrecommendations

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Men, Women & Medical Differences in Axial Spondyloarthropathy

Ruth Jessen Hickman, MD  |  October 24, 2019

Historically, ankylosing spondylitis was considered mainly a male disease. But it has become evident this predominance is not as great as previously believed. Here we discuss recent developments in the area, including potential differences between the sexes in symptom and disease burden, immunological and genetic background, diagnostic delay, treatment response and ongoing research questions. Medical…

Filed under:Axial SpondyloarthritisConditions Tagged with:Ankylosing Spondylitisaxial spondyloarthritis (SpA)Gendersexual dimorphism

Study Examines How Depression Subtypes May Stem from Osteoarthritis

Susan Bernstein  |  October 18, 2019

People with or at risk for sympto­matic knee osteoarthritis (OA) may be assigned to four depression subtypes with distinct clusters of depressive symptoms that may affect pain and disability over time, according to a new study in Arthritis Care & Research.1 Four depression subtypes were identified in the study using the Center for Epidemiologic Studies…

Filed under:ConditionsOsteoarthritis and Bone DisordersResearch Rheum Tagged with:Association of Rheumatology Professionals (ARP)Depression

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