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Query: UMLS:C0024141 (
systemic lupus erythematosus
)
44,322
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Patients with widespread pain or fibromyalgia syndrome have many symptoms besides musculoskeletal pain: e.g. fatigue, sleep difficulties, a swollen feeling in tissues, paresthesia, cognitive dysfunction, dizziness, and symptoms of overlapping conditions such as irritable bowel syndrome, headaches and restless legs syndrome. There is evidence for central sensitization in these conditions, but further studies are needed. Anxiety, stress and depression are also present in 30-45% of patients. Other factors that may contribute to symptoms include endocrine dysfunction, psychosocial distress, trauma, and disrupted sleep. Evaluation of a patient presenting with widespread pain includes history and physical examination to diagnose both fibromyalgia and associated or concomitant conditions. Fibromyalgia should be diagnosed by its own characteristic features. Some patients with otherwise typical symptoms of fibromyalgia may have as few as four to six tender points in clinical practice. Patients with rheumatoid arthritis and
systemic lupus erythematosus
should be evaluated for fibromyalgia, since 20-30% of them have associated fibromyalgia, requiring a different treatment approach.
Best
Pract Res Clin Rheumatol 2007 Jun
PMID:Role of central sensitization in symptoms beyond muscle pain, and the evaluation of a patient with widespread pain. 1760 95
Patient questionnaires are the quantitative tools available to rheumatologists to monitor their patients' health status and responses to therapy. The Health Assessment Questionnaire (HAQ) and its derivatives have been shown to be the most significant predictors of functional and work disability, costs, joint replacement surgery, and mortality; generally at higher levels of significance than joint counts, radiographs, and laboratory tests. Every encounter of a patient with a rheumatologist provides an opportunity to collect data. Yet patient questionnaires, which can be used in all rheumatic diseases, including osteoarthritis,
systemic lupus erythematosus
, fibromyalgia, scleroderma, and ankylosing spondylitis, are not included in routine care by most rheumatologists. Questionnaires can be adapted to include a simple subjective-objective-assessment-plan (SOAP) clinical encounter note that helps with data entry and also provides all the necessary information for clinical decision making in one sheet of paper. Data that are feasible to collect in clinical care provide the optimal approach to assessing quantitatively how patients are doing. If data are not collected and recorded, that opportunity, on that day, is lost forever. Rheumatologists would find it valuable to adapt questionnaires to the care they provide for all their patients, to document and improve the care they provide, and add quantitative data to standard clinical care.
Best
Pract Res Clin Rheumatol 2007 Aug
PMID:Monitoring outcomes of arthritis and longitudinal data collection in routine care using a patient questionnaire that incorporates a clinical note on one piece of paper. 1767 24
Systemic lupus erythematosus
(
SLE
) is a multisystem autoimmune disease with a fluctuating and unpredictable course. Monitoring
SLE
in the routine clinic setting is a challenge because both the disease and its treatment can result in organ damage. Disease activity indices and a cumulative history summary can be used to track complicated patients over time. Monitoring guidelines for damage from the disease and for the toxicity of treatment are available.
Best
Pract Res Clin Rheumatol 2007 Aug
PMID:Monitoring systemic lupus erythematosus in standard clinical care. 1767 30
A multidimensional health assessment questionnaire (MDHAQ) is useful in standard care of patients with all rheumatic diseases in a busy clinical setting. The MDHAQ was adapted from the classical health assessment questionnaire (HAQ) for feasibility in standard clinical care, with reduction of the number of activities from 20 to 10, visual analog scales (VAS) as 21 circles rather than 10 cm lines, availability of all core data set patient self-report measures and scoring templates on the front side, and a review of systems symptom checklist and review of recent medical history on the reverse side of a single page. Scoring templates are also available for routine assessment of patient index data (RAPID) scores, based on a composite of the three patient reported outcome (PRO) measures from the core data set included on the HAQ and MDHAQ, physical function pain, and patient estimate of global status. Flow sheets illustrating use of the MDHAQ in standard clinical care of patients with various rheumatic diseases, including psoriatic arthritis,
systemic lupus erythematosus
, ankylosing spondylitis, gout, scleroderma, vasculitis, fibromyalgia, inflammatory bowel disease arthritis, Behcet's syndrome, and familial Mediterranean fever, are presented to illustrate use of this simple questionnaire to add to clinical decisions and document patient courses and outcomes in standard clinical care of patients with all rheumatic diseases.
Best
Pract Res Clin Rheumatol 2007 Aug
PMID:Can a Multi-Dimensional Health Assessment Questionnaire (MDHAQ) and Routine Assessment of Patient Index Data (RAPID) scores be informative in patients with all rheumatic diseases? 1767 33
Rapid advances in understanding the immunopathogenesis of
systemic lupus erythematosus
(
SLE
) have yielded an unprecedented era of discovery of new targets with therapeutic potential. Recent clinical trials have also shed light on the optimal utility of several traditional therapies used in our
SLE
armamentarium.
Best
Pract Res Clin Rheumatol 2007 Dec
PMID:Systemic lupus erythematosus: modern strategies for management: a moving target. 1806 56
Many of the clinical, histological and serological manifestations of chronic graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) resemble autoimmune disease (AD), and although the differences are significant, they may be more semantic than biological. Indeed, studies suggest that some ADs may represent a fetal-versus-maternal chronic GVHD. Both conditions involve dysregulated immune responses resulting in tissue inflammation, damage, scarring and organ dysfunction, and both may be associated with a genetic predisposition. Epitope-specific autoaggressive phenomena such as immune thrombocytopenic purpura (ITP) are often seen following allogeneic hematopoietic stem-cell transplantation (HCT), implying a loss of specific tolerance to self structures. However, the more widespread manifestations of GVHD such as the well-known scleroderma-like symptoms differ in many fundamental respects from de-novo scleroderma, and other multisystem ADs such as
systemic lupus erythematosus
(
SLE
) or rheumatoid arthritis (RA).
Best
Pract Res Clin Haematol 2008 Jun
PMID:Chronic GVHD as an autoimmune disease. 1850 93
Severe vaso-occlusive retinopathy as the initial manifestation of
systemic lupus erythematosus
(
SLE
) is rare. We report a 16-year-old female who developed bilateral visual impairment. Fundus examinations showed bilateral "cherry-red spot" appearance, multiple confluent cotton wool spots, and widespread arterial occlusion. Laboratory studies showed leukopenia, antinuclear antibody (+), and anti-double-stranded DNA antibody (+). Malar rashes, oral ulcers, and bilateral knee joint tenderness were noted during physical examination.
SLE
was diagnosed and pulse therapy started immediately.
Best
corrected visual acuity of the left eye improved to 6/10 after treatment. However, there was no visual improvement in the right eye. Four months later, bilateral panretinal laser photocoagulation was performed due to retinal neovascularization. However, tractional retinal detachment of the right eye and vitreous hemorrhage of the left eye still occurred. After undergoing cryoretinopexy of the right eye and intravitreous tissue plasminogen activator injection of the left eye, the visual acuity of the patient's right eye remained hand movement only at 10 cm, but that of the left eye returned to 6/10. The ocular and systemic conditions were stable in the follow-up period of more than 2 years. This case demonstrates that in patients with severe vaso-occlusive retinopathy, a generalized immunological disorder, like
SLE
, should be suspected.
...
PMID:Severe vaso-occlusive retinopathy as the primary manifestation in a patient with systemic lupus erythematosus. 1865 4
More than half of maternal deaths in the UK are due to pre-existing medical conditions, and medical emergencies often mimic acute obstetric conditions. An acute flare of systemic
lupus
erythaematosus, a thyroid storm or a phaeochromocytoma have many of the signs and symptoms of imminent eclampsia. Similarly, severe postpartum haemorrhage can result in diagnostic difficulties of medical conditions such as Addison's syndrome or acute renal failure. An acute collapse can be due to a pulmonary embolus, myocardial infarction, tachyarrhythmia or myasthenia gravis. These conditions are rare; however, unless they are considered in a differential diagnosis, they will not be diagnosed, to the detriment of the woman and her infant. This chapter deals with acute medical conditions occurring uncommonly in pregnant women. An obstetrician should know the initial steps to take in the emergency management of these cases.
Best
Pract Res Clin Obstet Gynaecol 2008 Oct
PMID:Underlying medical conditions. 1867 94
Systemic lupus erythematosus
(
SLE
) is known to occur in all populations across the globe. In many respects
SLE
is similar across regions in its spectrum of clinical features, but the severity of the disease and comorbidity are appreciably different in the developing and industrialized worlds. Although data on the prevalence of
SLE
among Africans and Asians living in the tropics are limited,
SLE
is reportedly more common and more severe in people of African and Asian extraction living in industrialized countries. Renal disease is especially common in
SLE
patients in the developing world and is a major cause of morbidity and mortality. Discoid
lupus
and lymphopenia are frequent clinical features of
SLE
in patients of African extraction. Thrombotic complications and associated anti-phospholipid antibodies are less common in the Chinese and Black African
SLE
patients than in Caucasian patients. High frequencies of antibodies to extractable nuclear antigens, especially anti-Sm and anti-U1RNP, have been reported in
SLE
patients in many developing countries. Infections, including tuberculosis, are among the most important causes of comorbidity and mortality in
SLE
across all regions of the developing world. With a few exceptions, survival rates for
SLE
patients in developing countries are substantially lower than those reported in industrialized countries, with early death from infection and active disease. The bimodal pattern of mortality observed in many industrialized countries, is also less evident. While the poorer outcome in developing countries is partly related to inherent genetic differences, better outcomes can be achieved if new initiatives are undertaken to define the burden of disease, increase public awareness, and establish algorithms for diagnosis and treatment based on the available resources and local health-care delivery systems.
Best
Pract Res Clin Rheumatol 2008 Aug
PMID:Lupus in the developing world--is it any different? 1878 42
The antiphospholipid syndrome is an acquired autoimmune syndrome characterized by arterial and/or venous thrombosis and/or pregnancy morbidity in association with the prolonged presence of serum autoantibodies, including the so-called
lupus
anticoagulant and anticardiolipin antibodies, which are mainly directed against complexes of proteins and anionic phospholipids.
Best
Pract Res Clin Rheumatol 2008 Oct
PMID:The antiphospholipid syndrome. 1902 66
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