Month: September 2024

Diagnosing rheumatoid arthritis

Once a person has at least one joint that is painful and inflamed, a rheumatologist can use a ten point check to help diagnose rheumatoid arthritis (RA). The assessment covers four areas: joint involvement, serology, acute phase reactants plus duration of symptoms. There is a total of ten points. A score of six confirms a diagnosis of rheumatoid arthritis. Here is how it breaks down. Choose one from each group and total.. A. Joint involvementOne large joint 0 points2-10 large joints 1 point1-3 small joints 2 points4-10 small joints 3 pointsGreater than 10 joints including at least one small joint 5 points B. Serology (blood tests)Negative RF and negative ACPA 0Low positive RF or low positive ACPA 2High positive RF or high positive ACPA 3 C. Acute phase reactants(inflammation blood tests)Normal CRP and normal ESR 0Abnormal CRP or abnormal ERS 1 D. Duration of symptoms< 6 weeks 0 6 weeks 1 My choices are a total of 7. Note I am seronegative, and it took a lot of joint involvement to get a positive diagnosis. …

The Cruel side effect of Flares

A side effect of having flares is their random quality. One day a person with RA may be out dancing with the girls. The next week she may not able to join them because she is not well. Repeat. And then repeat. Is she neurotic? Her friends may be thinking. They stop asking her to go with them. Another young mother with RA  may ask her husband or her mother to help more with the children when she is having a flare that puts her flat. She was able to explain the severe and random nature of rheumatoid arthritis flares. Her husband and her mother had come to understand the severe and random nature of RA and were happy to help her more when she needed it. So, this is what a person with RA has to deal with.  You may be spending a large share of your time in severe pain. You may have serious doubts about your future. People will still look at you and say you look healthy to them.  And although …