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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: hip OA

2 New Clinical Practice Guidelines for JIA Released

Ruth Jessen Hickman, MD  |  April 20, 2022

Two new ACR Clinical Practice Guidelines provide recommendations on the pharmacologic management of JIA, focusing on treatment of oligoarthritis, temporomandibular arthritis & systemic JIA, as well as nonpharmacologic therapies, medication monitoring, immunizations & imaging.

Filed under:Uncategorized

Rheum After 5: Dr. David Pisetsky, Storyteller

Carol Patton  |  April 15, 2022

David S. Pisetsky, MD, PhD, often tells people that science involves reading and writing as much as conducting experiments. No matter what discoveries are made in the lab, if they can’t be communicated well or put into context, he asks, how can they be used to advance the field and benefit patients? The recipient of…

Filed under:AudioProfilesRheum After 5 Tagged with:Dr. David Pisetsky

Case Report: Pulmonary Sarcoid-Like Reaction in Patient Treated with Etanercept

Luis Lora Garcia, MD, Sneha Centala, MD, MS, Gitanjali Lobo, MD, Shahla Mallick, MD, & Diana Girnita, MD, PhD  |  April 15, 2022

Sarcoidosis is a multisystem disease characterized by noncaseating granulomas in affected tissues, mostly involving the lungs and lymph nodes.1,2 The etiology of sarcoidosis remains unknown but is thought to be due to an inflammatory response to an antigen exposure in genetically predisposed individuals.1 Tumor necrosis factor-α (TNF‑α), a pro-inflammatory cytokine, plays an essential role in…

Filed under:ConditionsOther Rheumatic Conditions Tagged with:case reportetanerceptFellowspulmonary sarcoidosisSarcoidosis

Case Report: Intermittent Fevers in a Patient with pJIA

Osman Bhatty, MD, Dale Kobrin, MD, Lauren Mathos, DO, Nazia Khatoon, MD, Yazan Samhouri, MD, Naga Sai Krishna Patibandla, MD, & Mary Chester Wasko, MD, MSc  |  April 15, 2022

A 26-year-old woman presented to our emergency department (ED) with intermittent fevers, nausea and vomiting. She had a past medical history of well-controlled, anti-nuclear antibody positive and rheumatoid factor negative polyarticular juvenile idiopathic arthritis (pJIA) and Crohn’s disease. Her maintenance treatment consisted of monthly intravenous infliximab, 10 mg of oral methotrexate weekly and 20 mg…

Filed under:ConditionsRheumatoid Arthritis Tagged with:case reportFellowsFellows Forumpolyarticular juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA)

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How Our Thinking Impacts Our Judgment

Joel M. Kremer, MD, MACR  |  April 15, 2022

Let’s start with a couple of short riddles: What question can you never answer “yes” to? Which word does not belong in the following list: stop cop mop chop prop or crop? [The answers appear at the end of this article.] Riddles are designed to make us think beyond the obvious answer. There is usually…

Filed under:Professional Topics Tagged with:biasDr. Daniel KahnemanDr. William Osler

Case Report: An Unusual Presentation of Neuro-Behçet’s Disease

Zeba Faroqui, MD  |  April 15, 2022

A 44-year-old woman presented to the emergency department with bifrontal headaches that had started approximately one month earlier. She was diagnosed with migraines and discharged home. Three days later, the patient returned to the emergency department upon recurrence of her headaches, and this time she also reported abnormal leg movements. A computerized tomography (CT) scan…

Filed under:ConditionsVasculitis Tagged with:Behçet’s diseasecase report

In Memoriam: Samuel Strober, MD

Theodore Pincus, MD  |  April 15, 2022

Samuel Strober was born on May 8, 1940, in Brooklyn, N.Y., the oldest son of Lee and Julius Strober. Sam attended Public School 92 in Brooklyn and Stuyvesant High School in Manhattan, and graduated from Columbia College, New York, in 1961, and Harvard Medical School, Boston, in 1966. While in high school, Sam won a…

Filed under:Professional TopicsProfiles Tagged with:Dr. Samuel StroberIn Memoriamobituary

In Memoriam: James F. Fries, MD

Halsted R. Holman, MD  |  April 15, 2022

James Franklin Fries was born on Aug. 25, 1938, in Normal, Ill. His mother taught middle school English and his father was a college business professor. Jim graduated from Stanford University in 1960 with a major in philosophy, and received his MD at Johns Hopkins Uni­versity, Baltimore, in 1964. He pursued internal medicine and rheumatology…

Filed under:Professional TopicsProfiles Tagged with:Dr. James F. FriesIn Memoriamobituary

Stronger Together: The Future of Physician Unions

Philip Seo, MD, MHS  |  April 15, 2022

If you ever want to be depressed, turn to the internet. This might strike some of you as a truism. Certainly, between the pandemic and the war in Ukraine, it is difficult to open your browser without being smacked in the face by a dismally depressing piece of news. In this par­ticular case, however, I’m…

Filed under:OpinionProfessional TopicsRheuminationsSpeak Out Rheum Tagged with:physician unions

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Private Practice, Research, Academia? Career Tips for Rheumatology Fellows

Herbert S.B. Baraf, MD, FACP, MACR  |  April 15, 2022

As rheumatology fellows approach the end of what for many is 25th grade, it’s time to focus on what you want to do for the rest of your life. For most rheumatology fellows it will be some form of clinical practice, although enormous opportunities exist throughout the medical field for you to apply your talents….

Filed under:Career DevelopmentProfessional Topics Tagged with:community practiceFellowsPrivate practice

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