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EULAR 2023 Notes from Milan (6.09.2023)
Dr. Jack Cush reviews highlight abstracts and sessions - covering lupus, RA, gout, Still's disease, safety data, AI in medicine and more - from last week's EULAR 2023 Congress held in Milan, Italy.
Read ArticleBella Mehta bella_mehta ( View Tweet)
EULAR 2023 – Day 2 Report
Day 2 at the international EULAR Congress meeting is always bigger and busier. There were sessions on JIA therapies, crystal arthritis, novel drugs for SLE and Sjogren's, early RA and preclinical RA interventions, IgG4 disease, osteoporosis and the growth and application of artificial intelligence in medicine and rheumatology.
Read ArticleAOSD: Young vs. Elderly Onset
Adult onset still's disease (AOSD) is an autoinflammatory condition characterized by fevers, arthritis, and rash. It is considered an orphan disease because of its low prevalence - it is reported anywhere between 16 to 40 per ten million.
Read ArticlePearls in AOSD – from #EULAR2023 Italian study of 64 patients – AOSD/sJIA pts who achieved drug-free remission more often had white blood cells count >15.000/uL at baseline, however those who were treated with cyclosporine likely failed drug free remission. Abst#AB1484 @rheumnow
Bella Mehta bella_mehta ( View Tweet)
Bella Mehta bella_mehta ( View Tweet)
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Juvenile and Adult-onset Scleroderma Differ
A retrospecitve cohort comparision of juvenile (jSSc) and adult-onset (aSSc) systemic sclerosis (SSc) are both rare but present differently.
Read ArticleNational Population Insights (4.28.2023)
Dr. Jack Cush reviews the news and journal reports and addresses 3 viewer case questions.
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Female Force
In medicine, a field where burnout is becoming the norm, there is much promotion of the idea of work-life balance. In reality, the scales between work and life aren’t really balanced. Is the potential for change on the horizon?
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Higher Rehospitalization Rates in Younger SLE Patients
A Medicare study shows that young adults with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) exhibit very high 30-day rehospitalization rates (36%) that are significantly higher than older SLE patients and age matched non-SLE patients.
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