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Rheumatic Disease Does Not Preclude Pregnancy

Ruth Jessen Hickman, MD  |  November 9, 2017

Preconception planning is essential to help women with autoimmune disease have optimal pregnancy outcomes. Unplanned pregnancy can also negatively impact disease course in some patients. Yet many rheumatologic patients of childbearing age do not receive adequate contraception or prepregnancy education and counseling. Rheumatologists must work collaboratively with other healthcare providers to make sure rheumatic patients…

Filed under:Conditions Tagged with:Autoimmune diseasecontraceptivecounselingEducationInflammatory MyopathiesLupusoutcomepatient carepregnancyRheumatic DiseaseRheumatoid arthritisrheumatologistriskSystemic sclerosisVasculitisWomen

Rheumatology Health Professionals’ Awards, Appointments and Announcements November 2017

Carol Patton  |  November 8, 2017

Dr. Sherine Gabriel Joins Board of Trustees In July, ACR Past President Sherine E. Gabriel, MD, MSc, joined the New York Academy of Medicine Board of Trustees. Dr. Gabriel is a distinguished professor and dean of Rutgers Robert Wood Johnson Medical School. As dean emerita of Mayo Medical School, Dr. Gabriel developed successful clinical research training and career development…

Filed under:Career DevelopmentProfessional TopicsResearch Rheum Tagged with:AwardsCareerProfilepromotionResearchrheumatologistrheumatology health professionals

Unwise Choices: EHRs, PBMs, Drug Costs Are Leading to Physician Burnout

Simon M. Helfgott, MD  |  November 5, 2017

My dear electronic health records How do I dislike thee? Let me count the ways Adaptation of Sonnet 43 By Elizabeth Barrett Browning, 1806–1861 As my tenure as physician editor winds down, it’s worth reviewing some of the more nettlesome issues confronting clinicians that have been previously discussed in these pages and gauge their current…

Filed under:EMRsInsuranceOpinionPractice SupportRheuminationsSpeak Out RheumWorkforce Tagged with:burnoutCareercostsdrugEHRElectronic health recordsHealthcareinsurancepharmacy benefit managersphysicianPractice Managementrheumatologist

U.S. Judge to Review Trump Healthcare Payments Cut

Dan Levine  |  October 23, 2017

SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters)—A U.S. judge is set to hear arguments on Monday about whether to block President Donald Trump’s decision to terminate controversial payments to health insurance companies under Obamacare. U.S. District Judge Vince Chhabria in San Francisco federal court has said he would quickly issue a ruling following the hearing. Several U.S. states sued…

Filed under:Legislation & AdvocacyProfessional Topics Tagged with:Affordable Care Act (ACA)Health InsuranceLegalObamacareTrump administration

The ACR, EULAR Partner to Refine Classification System, Develop New SLE Criteria

Thomas R. Collins  |  October 17, 2017

MADRID—Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) experts in North America and Europe are working together to refine the classification system for the disease, with the goal of producing a new set of criteria that is simpler to use and more scientifically rigorous than any classification approach previously published, speakers involved with the process said at the 2017…

Filed under:ConditionsEULAR/OtherMeeting ReportsSystemic Lupus Erythematosus Tagged with:AC&RAmerican College of Rheumatology (ACR)ClassificationcriteriaDiagnosisEULARmeeting reportsRheumatic DiseaserheumatologySLESystemic lupus erythematosus

Fellows’ Forum Case Report: Autoinflammatory Diseases and Roles of Genetic, Molecular Testing

Mahjabeen Haq, DO, L. Manuela Marinescu, MD, & Qingping Yao, MD, PhD  |  October 17, 2017

A 51-year-old Caucasian female was referred by a local rheumatologist to the Center of Autoinflammatory Diseases at Stony Brook University, N.Y., for an unusual disease presentation. The patient had had recurrent polyarthritis, fever and rash for the previous three years. She described having a migratory polyarthritis affecting the shoulders, knees, ankles and bilateral forefoot, with…

Filed under:ConditionsOther Rheumatic ConditionsResearch Rheum Tagged with:autoinflammatory diseasecase reportDiagnosisfellowFellowsFellows ForumfevergeneticpolyarthritisrashResearchsystemic inflammatory syndromeYao Syndrome

The Legacy of Amyloid: Infiltration Linked to Dementia, Rheumatic Disease

Simon M. Helfgott, MD  |  October 16, 2017

An Unforgettable Story Her name was unforgettable. Not only did we share our given names—Simon and Simone, but her French-Canadian surname was based on this appellation, too. I was the junior resident working on our hospital’s nephrology service when she was admitted for evaluation of progressively worsening kidney disease and an overall failure to thrive….

Filed under:ConditionsOpinionRheuminationsSpeak Out Rheum Tagged with:Amyloidosisbraincase reportClinicaldementiaDiagnosismortalityneuronoutcomepatient careplaquerheumatologistrheumatology

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Heated Gloves May Improve Hand Function in Diffuse Systemic Sclerosis

Rosemarie Curley, MPT, DPT, & Jeananne Elkins, PT, PhD, DPT, MPH  |  October 16, 2017

Systemic sclerosis (SSc), a subtype of scleroderma, is a rare, complex autoimmune disease characterized by widespread vasculopathy of the small arteries and fibroblast dysfunction.1,2 It has been described as a fibrosing micro­vascular disease, because vascular injury precedes and leads to tissue fibrosis.3 The resulting Raynaud’s phenomenon, pain, skin thickening and tightening, and multi-organ involvement have…

Filed under:ConditionsOther Rheumatic ConditionsResearch Rheum Tagged with:Clinicaldrug therapyhand functionhand warmersheated glovesinterventionnon-pharmaceutical therapiesoutcomepatient careRaynaud’s phenomenonResearchrheumatologistSclerodermastudiesSystemic sclerosistissue fibrosisTreatmentvasculopathy

Undetected Fractures Linked to Back Pain in Older Men

Shereen Lehman  |  September 22, 2017

(Reuters Health)—About three in five older men with tiny spinal fractures related to osteoporosis reported new or worsening back pain in a new study. Only about one-quarter of new vertebral fractures are diagnosed by a doctor, the study team writes in their September 7 online report in Journal of Bone and Mineral Research, though the…

Filed under:ConditionsOsteoarthritis and Bone Disorders Tagged with:Back painFracturesOsteoporosisundetected fracturesvertebral fracture

Whole-Body MRI, Ultrasound Imaging May Aid in Early Rheumatic Disease Diagnosis, Treatment

Thomas R. Collins  |  September 19, 2017

MADRID—Researchers say that whole-body MRI could yield an earlier diagnosis of spondyloarthropathy (SpA) in patients with early inflammatory joint symptoms, according to findings presented in a poster session at the Annual European Congress of Rheumatology (EULAR). The approach could lead to earlier treatment and better outcomes, they say. Investigators at the University of Leeds recruited…

Filed under:ConditionsOther Rheumatic ConditionsResearch Rheum Tagged with:Annual European Congress of RheumatologyDiagnosisdiagnostic testingEULARinflammationmagnetic resonance imagingMRIResearchRheumatic DiseaserheumatologyspondyloarthropathyTreatmentUltrasound

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