ACR Convergence 2025| Video: Rheuminations on Milestones & Ageism

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Search results for: heart disease

Psoriatic Arthritis Treatment Update

Mary Choy, PharmD, BCGP, FASHP  |  October 13, 2021

About 30% of patients with psoriasis have psoriatic arthritis (PsA), a complex, multi-faceted, chronic, inflammatory musculoskeletal and skin disease for which the treatment has changed considerably over the past few years.1 Biosimilars and other new drugs have become a therapeutic turning point for many patients suffering from rheumatic illnesses, including PsA. The treatment of PsA…

Filed under:Clinical Criteria/GuidelinesConditionsDrug UpdatesPsoriatic Arthritis Tagged with:PsA Resource Centerpsoriatic arthritis

Practical Ways to Manage Cardiovascular Risk in Patients with Psoriatic Arthritis

Samantha C. Shapiro, MD  |  October 5, 2021

Increased cardiovascular (CV) risk in patients with rheumatic disease is old news. Over the past decade, a multitude of studies have demonstrated elevated CV risk in a variety of conditions: systemic lupus erythematosus, rheumatoid arthritis and psoriatic arthritis (PsA), to name a few. The risk in patients with rheumatic disease seems to be linked to…

Filed under:ConditionsPsoriatic Arthritis Tagged with:psoriatic arthritis

Case Report: Child Develops Coronary Artery Aneurysms with GPA

Tryphina Adel Mikhail & Mary Bratovich Toth, MD  |  June 14, 2021

In September 2019, a previously healthy, 9-year-old white girl presented to the emergency department following two months of sinusitis and unexplained fever responsive to ibuprofen. She presented with anorexia; a 9 lb. weight loss; intermittent, nonbilious, nonbloody emesis; and occasional epistaxis with digital manipulation of the nose. Six weeks prior to admission, she had presented to…

Filed under:ConditionsPediatric ConditionsVasculitis Tagged with:case reportcoronary artery anuerysmsgranulomatosis with polyangiitisPediatricPediatric Rheum

Grit, Gratitude & Grace: Resilience Despite the Pain

Mary Beth Nierengarten  |  March 24, 2021

Clinicians can help their patients tap into personal resilience, and such characteristics as grit, gratitude and grace, to manage their chronic pain, says Afton L. Hassett, PsyD.

Filed under:ACR ConvergenceConditionsMeeting ReportsPain Syndromes Tagged with:ACR Convergence 2020Chronic paingratitudePain Management

Experts Discuss Unique Challenges Posed by Difficult-to-Treat RA

Vanessa Caceres  |  November 24, 2020

ACR CONVERGENCE 2020—Patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) and concurrent liver disease or interstitial lung disease (ILD), or with treatment-refractory RA, pose treatment challenges, said panelists in the ACR Convergence 2020 session, How I Treat Difficult RA. Each panelist discussed a difficult case and raised big-picture questions on how to best treat patients facing each challenge….

Filed under:ACR ConvergenceConditionsMeeting ReportsRheumatoid Arthritis Tagged with:ACR Convergence 2020ACR Convergence 2020 – RA

Under Pressure: An Update on Pulmonary Hypertension

Jason Liebowitz, MD, FACR  |  November 9, 2020

ACR CONVERGENCE 2020—In patients with connective tissue diseases, such as systemic sclerosis (SSc), pulmonary hypertension (PH) remains one of the leading causes of morbidity and mortality. In her lecture on Friday, Nov. 6, Pulmonary Hypertension: An Update, Mardi Gomberg-Maitland, MD, MSc, professor of medicine and medical director of the Pulmonary Hypertension Program at The George…

Filed under:ACR ConvergenceConditionsMeeting ReportsSystemic Sclerosis Tagged with:ACR Convergence 2020pulmonary arterial hypertension

ACR Convergence 2020 Kicks Off: Plenary session speakers highlight racial differences in lupus & COVID-19-related findings

Ruth Jessen Hickman, MD  |  November 7, 2020

ACR CONVERGENCE 2020—The ACR’s first fully virtual annual meeting kicked off on Thursday, Nov. 5. During the Opening Session, ACR President Ellen M. Gravallese, MD, talked about how the specialty’s response during the pandemic has provided great hope and will help rheumatology become an even more essential specialty. At the first Plenary Session on Friday,…

Filed under:ACR ConvergenceConditionsMeeting ReportsOther Rheumatic ConditionsSystemic Lupus Erythematosus Tagged with:ACR Convergence 2020ACR Convergence 2020 - SLECOVID-19Global Rheumatology Alliance

The Half-Life of the Truth

Philip Seo, MD, MHS  |  July 15, 2020

My fellow was laughing at me. By itself, I don’t think this was an unusual occurrence. I am quite certain that my fellows laugh at me all the time. That said, when such laughter is called for, I am accustomed to a certain protocol being observed. In general, I expect the laughter to be contained,…

Filed under:Education & TrainingOpinionResearch RheumRheuminationsSpeak Out Rheum Tagged with:Research

nukeaf / shutterstock.com

The History of Treating Lupus with Hydroxychloroquine

Ruth Jessen Hickman, MD  |  June 15, 2020

Given how unexpectedly front and center hydroxychloroquine has been in discussions about the treatment of COVID-19 this year, it makes sense to look at how it became so central to the treatment of a rheumatologic condition. In 1991, an article appeared in The New England Journal of Medicine that would alter the way rheumatologists approached…

Filed under:ConditionsSystemic Lupus Erythematosus Tagged with:Lost & Foundretinopathy

Yes, the FDA Employs Rheumatologists. Here’s Their Role.

Renée Bacher  |  April 15, 2020

Ever wonder what role physician regulators—rheumatologists, in particular—perform at the U.S. Food & Drug Administration (FDA)? “I am not sure that many practicing rheumatologists know there are clinicians who work for the FDA,” says rheumatologist Nadia Habal, MD, a medical officer in the Division of Pulmonary, Allergy, and Rheumatology Products at the FDA. “It would…

Filed under:Drug Updates Tagged with:U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA)

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