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Search results for: vertebral fracture

Top Research in Psoriatic Arthritis Presented at ACR Convergence 2024

David S. Pisetsky, MD, PhD  |  November 26, 2024

Editor’s note: What research on psoriatic arthritis (PsA) presented at ACR Convergence 2024 has the greatest potential for a positive impact on clinical care, treatment options or serve as the basis for future research? That’s the question The Rheumatologist asked David S. Pisetsky, MD, PhD—our founding editor—to consider. Dr. Pisetsky, a professor of medicine and immunology…

Filed under:ACR ConvergenceConditionsMeeting ReportsPsoriatic ArthritisResearch ReviewsResearch Rheum Tagged with:ACR Convergence 2024ACR Convergence 2024 PsAbone mineral density (BMD)calcium pyrophosphate deposition diseasecardiovascular eventFibromyalgiaFracturesOutcomesSex DifferencesSmokingUltrasound

Case Report: Giant Cell Arteritis-Related Stroke

Jessica Meek, MD, Anna Coppinger, DO, & Sejal Khan, DO  |  September 10, 2023

Thromboembolic events are major contributors to the morbidity and mortality of patients with giant cell arteritis (GCA), but little is known about how GCA may increase the risk of ischemic strokes. GCA-related stroke is described as an ischemic cerebral infarct occurring within three to four weeks of GCA diagnosis and treatment. It occurs in 3–7%…

Filed under:ConditionsHome SliderVasculitis Tagged with:case reportGCAgiant cell arteritis (GCA)stroke

Untangling the Diagnosis & Management of GCA

Jason Liebowitz, MD, FACR  |  June 28, 2021

Vision loss, implications of treatment and more—Sarah Mackie, BMBCh, PhD, MRCP, discussed the latest research on the evaluation and management of giant cell arteritis.

Filed under:ConditionsEULAR/OtherMeeting ReportsVasculitis Tagged with:EULARGCAgiant cell arteritis (GCA)vision loss

Therapeutic Exercise for Bone Health

Mary Beth Nierengarten  |  December 17, 2020

ACR CONVERGENCE 2020—Attention to bone health in people at risk of developing, or who already have, osteoporosis is essential to reduce their increased risk for fragility fractures. Major risk factors for osteoporosis include being female, white, of small frame and having a family history of osteoporosis, as well as having secondary causes of osteoporosis, such…

Filed under:ACR ConvergenceConditionsMeeting ReportsOsteoarthritis and Bone Disorders Tagged with:ACR Convergence 2020boneExerciseexercise therapyOsteoporosispostmenopausalpremenopauseWomen

Premenopausal Osteoporosis Poses Special Clinical Challenges

Thomas R. Collins  |  March 12, 2020

ATLANTA—Osteoporosis in premenopausal women is uncommon compared with its frequency in post-menopausal women, but when it is suspected, it poses some difficult questions for clinicians: How should it be diagnosed in this understudied population? If found, should it be treated—and how? Elizabeth Shane, MD, professor of medicine at Columbia University and attending physician at New…

Filed under:ConditionsMeeting ReportsOsteoarthritis and Bone Disorders Tagged with:2019 ACR/ARP Annual MeetingOsteoporosis

Case Report: Acne Drug Leads Patient to Retinoid Hyperostosis

Rachael Stovall, MD, Akira M. Murakami, MD, & Maureen Dubreuil, MD, MSc  |  November 19, 2018

Presentation A 26-year-old man with a history of acne vulgaris and hidradenitis suppurativa presented to our rheumatology clinic with persistent back pain and stiffness of three years’ duration. He described bilateral low back pain that was worse when he arose in the morning and at night when he was trying to sleep. In a similar…

Filed under:Axial SpondyloarthritisConditions Tagged with:Ankylosing SpondylitisisotretinoinRetinoid Hyperostosis

How Does Down Syndrome Affect Musculoskeletal Health?

How Does Down Syndrome Affect Musculoskeletal Health?

Prasanna Bastola, MBBS, & Daniel A. Albert, MD  |  August 17, 2018

Down syndrome (trisomy 21) is one of the most common chromosomal abnormalities. According to the Genomic Resource Centre of the World Health Organization, each year 3,000–5,000 children are born with this chromosome disorder, and about 250,000 families have at least one member with Down syndrome in the U.S. Down syndrome is caused by numerical aneuploidy,…

Filed under:Conditions Tagged with:Down Syndrome

Spine Surgery May not Be Needed to Ease Back Pain from Osteoporosis

Lisa Rapaport  |  June 3, 2018

(Reuters Health)—Patients with acute pain from osteoporosis damage to the spine don’t experience any more relief from surgery to inject cement into cracked or broken vertebrae than they would with a sham procedure, a recent trial in The Netherlands suggests. All of the patients in the experiment had compression fractures, which can happen when osteoporosis…

Filed under:ConditionsOsteoarthritis and Bone Disorders Tagged with:Back painCristina FiranescuEvan DaviesOsteoporosisspine surgery

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Medical Paradoxes in Clinic, Lab Should Encourage Physicians to Reappraise Ideas about Health and Disease

Simon M. Helfgott, MD  |  January 19, 2017

Wash your hands. This most basic tenet of proper hygiene has been drummed into our heads for years. It’s an obvious infection prevention activity, yet for years, compliance among physicians and other caregivers has been lackluster. To rectify this matter, regulatory agencies began auditing hospital staff adherence to this axiom of infection prevention. Not only…

Filed under:OpinionResearch RheumRheuminationsSpeak Out Rheum Tagged with:clinicDietDiseaseDrugslaboutcomeparadoxpatient careResearchrheumatologistrheumatologySmoking

Paleopathology Uses Patients from the Past to Investigate Today’s Diseases

Bruce Rothschild, MD  |  February 1, 2014

Evidence of disease in prehistoric skeletons can provide clues to early characteristics of rheumatoid arthritis, calcium pyrophosphate deposition disease, and other joint disorders

Filed under:Axial SpondyloarthritisConditionsResearch RheumRheumatoid Arthritis Tagged with:Ankylosing SpondylitisEtiologyHistoryimagingjoint diseaseradiographReactive arthritisResearchRheumatoid arthritisrheumatologist

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