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Search results for: heart disease

Opinion: Adhering to Standards of Care Helps Manage Risk

Bruce Rothschild, MD  |  May 13, 2016

Medicare and other third-party payers have started predicating reimbursement on adherence to standards of care. Post hoc chart reviews have resulted in substantial take-backs for failure to adhere to those values in cardiology, pulmonology and expanding to other areas. Outpatient medicine is also being subjected to such scrutiny. The question of standards and who sets…

Filed under:Practice SupportQuality Assurance/Improvement Tagged with:patient carerheumatologyriskstandards of care

Epilepsy Patients May Have Poor Bone Health, High Fracture Risk

Michele B. Kaufman, PharmD, BCGP  |  May 11, 2016

Some patients with epilepsy have a higher risk of fracture due to falls, and some studies have suggested that anti-epileptic drugs may also contribute to the fracture risk. In a recent review, researchers examined if there is a link between epilepsy and osteoporosis, making recommendations to aid future research…

Filed under:ConditionsDrug UpdatesOsteoarthritis and Bone Disorders Tagged with:anti-epletic drugsbonebone mineral density (BMD)EpilepsyFracturesOsteoporosis

Patients with Lupus: Plasmacytoid Dendritic Cells Fail to Induce Regulatory B Cells

Lara C. Pullen, PhD  |  May 9, 2016

A recent study found that plasmacytoid dentricitic cells (pDCs) control the differentiation of immature B cells into regulatory B (Breg) cells or plasmablast, depending on the concentration of IFNα. For patients with SLE, researchers found that immune regulatory feedback between pDCs and Breg cells is dysfunctional, with the exception of patients who respond to rituximab…

Filed under:ConditionsSystemic Lupus Erythematosus Tagged with:B cellsInflammatory DiseaseLupussystemic lupus erythematosus (SLE)

Researchers Work to Untangle the Relationship Between Blood Lipids, Bone Health & Diet

Lara C. Pullen, PhD  |  May 2, 2016

A recent editorial examined research findings on how low levels of high-density lipoprotein (HDL) in the blood affect bone health, resulting in cartilage dysfunction and the development of osteoarthritis (OA). Authors note that a high-fat diet in mice with HDL deficiency resulted in OA development; thus, they conclude that in patients with metabolic syndrome, HDL may have a causative relationship to OA…

Filed under:ConditionsOsteoarthritis and Bone Disorders Tagged with:bonebone lossDietlipidsosteoarthritis (OA)Osteoporosis

Patients with Mental Illness Fare Worse after Hip Surgery

Madeline Kennedy  |  April 28, 2016

(Reuters Health)—People with psychiatric illnesses are more likely to have complications after hip replacement surgery, according to a recent analysis. This added risk is something doctors and patients should discuss in advance, the study team writes in The Journal of Arthroplasty, March 17. Previous studies have linked depression and other mental illnesses to greater complications…

Filed under:Conditions Tagged with:Arthritishiphip arthroplastyMental Healthpatient outcomepsychiatry

Mediterranean Diet Tied to Lower Hip Fracture Risk

Andrew M. Seaman  |  March 29, 2016

(Reuters Health)—Women who maintain an overall healthy diet may benefit from a slightly reduced risk of hip fractures later in life, according to a new U.S. study. Women who followed a Mediterranean-style diet were about three tenths of a percent less likely to break a hip over about 16 years, compared to women who didn’t…

Filed under:ConditionsOsteoarthritis and Bone Disorders Tagged with:DieteatingFractureshiphip fracturehip fracture riskMediterranean dietOsteoporosis

Trying to Parse True Meaning of Pain Can be Challenging for Rheumatologists

Trying to Parse True Meaning of Pain Can Be Challenging for Rheumatologists

Simon M. Helfgott, MD  |  March 15, 2016

Discussing aching joints, sore muscles and tender limbs is all in our day’s work. We are rheumatologists; we deal in misery. But trying to parse the true meaning of these terms is among the most vexing of clinical challenges.

Filed under:OpinionRheuminationsSpeak Out Rheum Tagged with:DiagnosisPainpatient carerheumatologistrheumatologyswelling

Diagnosis Can Be Elusive for Fever of Unknown Origin

Diagnosis Can Be Elusive for Fever of Unknown Origin

Charles Radis, DO  |  March 15, 2016

Settling into room 501 at Maine Medical Center, Mrs. N was on her way to the bathroom when she felt it coming on. One moment she was okay; the next, her chest felt damp and cold, even as her face flushed and her temperature spiked. Her forehead glistened beads of warm sweat. She felt the…

Filed under:Conditions Tagged with:Diagnosisfeverpatient careprodromeRheumatic DiseaseRheumatoid arthritisrheumatologistSarcoidosis

2015 ACR/ARHP Annual Meeting: Unknowns Persist Around Sarcoidosis Etiology, Pathogenesis, Treatment

Thomas R. Collins  |  March 15, 2016

SAN FRANCISCO—The Kveim-Siltzbach skin test for a diagnosis of sarcoidosis was developed in 1941, then popularized in 1961. Since then, the knowledge base about the disease has not expanded much, said Kristin Highland, MD, who has dual appointments at Cleveland Clinic’s Respiratory Institute and Orthopedics and Rheumatology Institute. “We don’t know a whole lot more…

Filed under:ConditionsMeeting ReportsOther Rheumatic Conditions Tagged with:2015 ACR/ARHP Annual MeetingAmerican College of Rheumatology (ACR)DiagnosisEtiologyinflammatoryPathogenesisrheumatologistSarcoidosisTreatment

Currier McEwen, MD, Remembered as Rheumatologist, Hybridizer of Flowers

Kathleen Ferrell, PT, MLA, & Richard Brasington, MD  |  March 15, 2016

Currier McEwen, MD, was a truly remarkable rheumatologist, accomplishing more than even the best of us could imagine. He is even more recognized in the horticulture community as a hybridizer of flowers. He was born Osceola Currier McEwen on April Fool’s Day, 1902, in Newark, N.J., and died in 2003, at the age of 101….

Filed under:Profiles Tagged with:hobbyIn Memoriamrheumatologist

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