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Search results for: nutrition

Gout Emergency Department Visits Up

Lara C. Pullen, PhD  |  July 16, 2018

In the past nine years, visits to the emergency department by gout patients have increased by almost 27%. Researchers suggest physicians may not adequately be addressing the burden of gout and the underlying accumulation of uric acid, driving the dramatic increase in emergency department visits in the U.S…

Filed under:ConditionsGout and Crystalline Arthritis

Little Evidence to Support Most Dietary Interventions for Psoriasis

Marilynn Larkin  |  June 29, 2018

NEW YORK (Reuters Health)—New recommendations from the National Psoriasis Foundation Medical Board suggest that losing weight by following a low-calorie diet can reduce psoriasisseverity in overweight patients, but there is little evidence to support other dietary interventions. “Our psoriasis patients have long asked us about the role of diet on psoriasis,” Dr. April Armstrong of the…

Filed under:Conditions Tagged with:dietary interventionlow-calorie dietNational Psoriasis Foundation Medical Boardpsoriasisseverity

Case Review: MRI Leads to Non-Rheumatic Diagnosis Surprise

Anna Helena Jonsson, MD, PhD, & Julia F. Charles, MD, PhD  |  May 17, 2018

Rheumatologists often rely on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in the evaluation of suspected muscular diseases. Here, we describe a case in which unexpected findings on MRI pointed to a diagnosis rarely considered as a mimicker of rheumatologic disease. The Case A 19-year-old man of Middle Eastern descent was admitted to our hospital for evaluation of…

Filed under:Conditions Tagged with:anorexia nervosamagnetic resonance imagingMRI

Many in U.S. Take More Calcium Supplements than Necessary

Lisa Rapaport  |  March 30, 2018

(Reuters Health)—Some adults in the U.S. who use supplements to get their daily requirement of calcium are taking higher doses than necessary, a recent study suggests. Researchers examined nationally representative survey data on dietary habits and vitamin and supplement use collected between 1999 and 2014 from 42,038 adults. About one in 20 adults got a…

Filed under:Drug Updates Tagged with:calcium supplementsPamela Lutsey

A Parathyroid Hormone Both Builds & Destroys Bone

Larry Beresford  |  March 19, 2018

SAN DIEGO—A hormone secreted by the parathyroid gland is both a builder and a destroyer of bone in humans, with important implications for a variety of conditions treated by rheumatologists. In the Oscar Gluck, MD, Memorial Lecture at the 2017 ACR/ARHP Annual Meeting Nov. 3–8, Henry Kronenberg, MD, chief of the Endocrine Division at Massachusetts…

Filed under:ConditionsMeeting Reports Tagged with:ACR/ARHP Annual Meetingbone formation

Healthy Diet Linked to Lower Hip Fracture Risk in U.S. Women

Mary Gillis  |  March 4, 2018

(Reuters Health)—Eating an overall healthy diet is tied to a lower risk of hip fracture among women over age 50, a U.S. study suggests. Researchers analyzed decades’ worth of dietary and health data for more than 100,000 U.S. men and women. They found that women who scored highest on the American Healthy Eating Index-2010 (AHEI)…

Filed under:ConditionsOsteoarthritis and Bone Disorders Tagged with:DietFractureshealthy eatinghip fracturehip fracture riskOsteoporosispostmenopausal womenWomen

3 Experts Discuss Bone Health

Thomas R. Collins  |  February 18, 2018

SAN DIEGO—At the 2017 ACR/ARHP Annual Meeting Nov. 3–8, experts discussed improving bone health in the U.S., gave tips on bone health disorders in pediatrics and reviewed new translational science findings for joint conservation in early osteonecrosis. E. Michael Lewiecki, MD, director of the New Mexico Clinical Research & Osteoporosis Center in Albuquerque, N.M., called…

Filed under:Meeting ReportsOsteoarthritis and Bone Disorders Tagged with:ACR/ARHP Annual Meetingbone and jointJuvenile arthritisOsteoarthritisOsteonecrosis

Intriguing Patient Cases Presented at the ACR Annual Meeting Thieves Market

Susan Bernstein  |  February 17, 2018

SAN DIEGO—At the 2017 Thieves Market, held Nov. 6 at the ACR/ARHP Annual Meeting, rheumatologists from around the world presented patient cases to an audience of colleagues, who then voted via text messaging to choose the cases they felt were most perplexing or intriguing. The winner received a free 2018 Annual Meeting registration, and the…

Filed under:ConditionsMeeting ReportsMyositisSoft Tissue PainVasculitis Tagged with:ACR/ARHP Annual MeetingCastleman's diseasemyositisVasculitis

New Rheumatology Disease Research & Advice

Thomas R. Collins  |  February 17, 2018

SAN DIEGO—Top researchers gathered for a review course at the start of the 2017 ACR/ARHP Annual Meeting in November to describe new research, their own treatment strategies and new ways of thinking about an array of rheumatic diseases. Here are the highlights: Raynaud’s & Other Digit Problems When a patient walks into your clinic with…

Filed under:Axial SpondyloarthritisMeeting ReportsOsteoarthritis and Bone DisordersRheumatoid ArthritisSystemic SclerosisVasculitis Tagged with:ACR/ARHP Annual Meetingadhesive capsulitisANCAaxial spondyloarthritis (SpA)diabetesDry eyeEthicslung diseasemeniscus surgeryOsteoarthritisRaynaud'sred eyeRheumatoid arthritisscleritisVasculitis

Diffuse Scleroderma: A 1991 Case Through the Lens of Today

Diffuse Scleroderma: A 1991 Case Through the Lens of Today

Charles Radis, DO  |  February 17, 2018

The year was 1991. It was my first Tuesday as a rheumatology fellow at the University of Pittsburgh’s Presbyterian Hospital. Navigating a maze of buildings and hallways, I delivered myself to the entrance to the scleroderma clinic. Running late and not knowing whether there was a separate entrance for staff, I clicked open the door….

Filed under:ConditionsSystemic Sclerosis Tagged with:case reportScleroderma

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