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Articles tagged with "Pediatric Rheum"

What Rheumatologists Should Know About Childhood-Onset SLE & Vasculitis

Mary Beth Nierengarten  |  December 2, 2021

ACR CONVERGENCE 2021—Many of the effects of childhood-onset systemic lupus erythematosus (cSLE) and vasculitis carry into adulthood and present adult rheumatologists with key differences in managing these patients after their transition from a pediatric to an adult provider. “The young adult with childhood-onset lupus is similar in many ways to adults with lupus, but there…

Case Report: Child Develops Coronary Artery Aneurysms with GPA

Tryphina Adel Mikhail & Mary Bratovich Toth, MD  |  June 14, 2021

In September 2019, a previously healthy, 9-year-old white girl presented to the emergency department following two months of sinusitis and unexplained fever responsive to ibuprofen. She presented with anorexia; a 9 lb. weight loss; intermittent, nonbilious, nonbloody emesis; and occasional epistaxis with digital manipulation of the nose. Six weeks prior to admission, she had presented to…

2020 Pediatric Rheumatology Research in Review

Carina Stanton  |  November 24, 2020

ACR CONVERGENCE 2020—This has been a busy year for research publications covering a number of pediatric rheumatic diseases, including the emerging multi-system inflammatory syndrome (MIS-C) associated with SARS CoV-2. Despite the many challenges brought about by the COVID-19 pandemic, a healthy collection of publications covering a wide range of pediatric rheumatology research topics were published…

JIA & the Temporomandibular Joint: Diagnostic Challenges & Treatment Options

Marinka Twilt, MD, MSCE, PhD, & Peter B. Stoustrup DDS, PhD  |  April 10, 2020

Juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA) can affect all joints, including the temporomandibular joints (TMJs). For a long time, the TMJ was a “forgotten” joint in pediatric rheumatology, although Sir Frederick Still did comment on a small mandible in his first case series on juvenile arthritis in 1897. In recent years, more attention has been given to…

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Sjögren’s Syndrome in Kids: Diagnostic Challenges & Treatment Options

Sara M. Stern, MD, Matthew L. Basiaga, DO, MSCE, & Scott M. Lieberman, MD, PhD  |  January 17, 2020

A 14-year-old girl is referred to your office for fatigue and arthralgias. While you’re obtaining her past medical history, she divulges that she has had four episodes of bilateral parotitis, each lasting two weeks. An otolaryngologist evaluated her. She lacked sicca symptoms, had a normal complete blood count (CBC), normal inflammatory markers and a negative…

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