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Search results for: knee

EULAR 2015: The Biology of Fatigue

Thomas R. Collins  |  July 1, 2015

ROME, Italy—Fatigue, a problem experienced frequently by patients with rheumatic diseases, is best thought of as a survival mechanism and as a single phenomenon, not a condition that comes in a variety of forms, an expert said in a session at EULAR 2015, the annual congress of the European League Against Rheumatism (EULAR). Gene Regulated…

Filed under:ConditionsMeeting ReportsRheumatoid Arthritis Tagged with:EULAR

Ethics Forum: Plagiarism in EMRs Saves Time, But Can Raise Risk of Errors

Jane S. Kang, MD, & Robert H. Shmerling, MD  |  June 15, 2015

Case You’ve been asked to see an inpatient for a rheumatologic consultation. After seeing the patient, you enter an initial consult note in the electronic medical record (EMR). The next day, when you write a follow-up note for this patient, you copy part of your assessment and plan from your prior note. Soon after you…

Filed under:EthicsProfessional TopicsTechnology Tagged with:Electronic medical recordsmedical errorsplagiarismTechnology

Medicare Paid Doctors $90 Billion in 2013, up 17%

Reuters Staff  |  June 3, 2015

NEW YORK (Reuters)—Medicare, the government-run health insurance program for elderly and disabled Americans, paid physicians $90 billion in 2013, up 17% from $77 billion in 2012, U.S. healthcare officials reported on Monday. Physician payments accounted for less than one-fifth of Medicare’s 2013 net outlays of $492 billion, which rose from $466 billion in 2012. Payments to…

Filed under:Practice Support Tagged with:MedicarePractice Management

Isometric Exercise May Immediately Reduce Pain of Patellar Tendinopathy

Rob Goodier  |  June 2, 2015

NEW YORK (Reuters Health)—Volleyball players with patellar tendinopathy reported an immediate easing of their pain after isometric exercise, and the effect persisted for 45 minutes after the intervention, a new study has found. In contrast, isotonic exercise appeared to diminish the athletes’ pain to a lesser degree, and the effect did not last at the…

Filed under:ConditionsSoft Tissue Pain Tagged with:isometric exercisekneePainTendinopathy

FDA Issues Safety Alerts for Bisphosphonates & SGLT2 Inhibitors

Michele B. Kaufman, PharmD, BCGP  |  May 20, 2015

Safety The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has updated the Warnings and Precautions sections of prescribing information for the bisphosphonate agents, including risedronate sodium tablets and combinations with calcium (Actonel/Atelvia), alendronate and combinations with vitamin D (Binosto/Fosamax), ibandronate (Boniva), etidronate (Didronel) and the RANK-ligand inhibitor denosumab (Prolia/Xgeva).1 This information relates to an increased risk for…

Filed under:ConditionsDrug UpdatesOsteoarthritis and Bone Disorders

Rheumatologist Recalls Personal Experience with RA

Monica Piecyk, MD  |  May 15, 2015

In late March 2012, I awoke with pain in my left hand. I had difficulty moving my metacarpophalangeal (MCP) joints. They did not move smoothly, but clunked. As I repeatedly attempted to open and close my hand, I realized that I had morning stiffness. As the pain and stiffness gradually improved over the next hour,…

Filed under:ConditionsOpinionPatient PerspectivePractice SupportProfilesRheumatoid ArthritisSpeak Out Rheum Tagged with:DiagnosisManagementPhysician–PatientRheumatoid arthritisrheumatologistSpeak Out Rheumatology

Melioidosis: What Rheumatologists Need to Know

G.C. Yathish, MD, Taral Parikh, MD, Parikshit Sagdeo, MD, Balakrishnan Canchi, MD, and Gurmeet Mangat, MD  |  May 15, 2015

Burkholderia pseudomallei, the causative agent of melioidosis, is endemic in Southeast Asia and northern Australia.1 In recent years, the incidence of melioidosis has increased worldwide. Septic arthritis is a rare, but well-recognized, manifestation of melioidosis. Case Report A 49-year-old woman with known diabetes was admitted elsewhere with uncontrolled diabetes and fever. She was found to…

Filed under:Conditions Tagged with:infectious diseasemelioidosisPainrheumatologistseptic arthritis

Figures 1 & 2: On exam, the patient had thickening of the skin on her extremities.

Dermatology Symptoms Point to Connective Tissue Disorder

Natalie A. Wright, MD, and Joseph F. Merola, MD, MMSc, FAAD, FACR  |  May 15, 2015

The Case A 68-year-old woman with a past medical history of Charcot-Marie-Tooth presents with thickening of the skin on her trunk and extremities, which she has had for the past seven months (see Figures 1 and 2). Her symptoms first began with swelling of her bilateral upper and lower extremities. She is now having difficulty…

Filed under:ConditionsSystemic Sclerosis Tagged with:connective tissue disorderDermatologyeosinophilic fasciitis

Can DIY Medicine Tame Rampaging Healthcare Costs?

Simon M. Helfgott, MD  |  April 1, 2015

High health insurance deductibles, physician charges, medication expenses spur patients to seek less costly lab testing, surgical procedures, prescription drugs

Filed under:OpinionPractice SupportRheuminationsSpeak Out Rheum Tagged with:costsHealth InsuranceHelfgottMedicationprescription drugrheumatologysurgical procedure

New Therapeutics for Osteoarthritis May Be in Sight

Antonios Aliprantis, MD, PhD  |  April 1, 2015

Overview of OA pathogenesis, recent discoveries suggest new treatment strategies are possible

Filed under:ConditionsDrug UpdatesOsteoarthritis and Bone DisordersResearch Rheum Tagged with:discoveryjoint degenerationOsteoarthritisPainPathogenesisResearchTreatment

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