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Review Early rheumatoid arthritis. 2006
Machold KP, Nell V, Stamm T, Aletaha D, Smolen JS. · Department of Rheumatology, Internal Medicine III, Vienna Medical University, Austria. · Curr Opin Rheumatol. · Pubmed #16582693 No free full text.
Abstract: PURPOSE OF REVIEW: This review provides novel and updated information on pathogenesis, referral, and clinical characteristics as well as therapeutic approaches in early rheumatoid arthritis. RECENT FINDINGS: Early referral is important, but new classification criteria for early rheumatoid arthritis need to be elaborated. Predictive markers for rheumatoid arthritis are still confined to autoantibodies; respective algorithms have been presented. Other biomarkers will still have to prove their usefulness. Magnetic resonance imaging and sonography do not appear to sufficiently distinguish between early rheumatoid and nonrheumatoid arthritis. Rheumatoid arthritis has become milder at presentation in recent years. In its very early stages, the cytokine profile reflects T-cell activation and switches to abundant proinflammatory cytokines thereafter. Disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs plus glucocorticoids are highly effective, as is early use of tumor necrosis factor blockers plus methotrexate. Tight control of disease activity and subsequent therapeutic adjustments are highly effective. Disease activity indices that are simple to calculate have been presented and validated. Early intensive therapy may lead to decrease in disability and cost reduction in rheumatoid arthritis. SUMMARY: Understanding of early arthritis is increasing, especially in prognostic and therapeutic respects, and new treatment strategies appear to improve the outcome in patients with early arthritis. Nevertheless, much remains to be studied to better address the issue of early rheumatoid arthritis.
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Review [Activity-score based therapy in rheumatoid arthritis] 2006
Machold K, Nell V, Aletaha D, Smolen J, Stamm T. · Klinische Abt. für Rheumatologie, Universitätsklinik für Innere Medizin III, Wien. · Z Rheumatol. · Pubmed #16496075 No free full text.
Abstract: Disease activity scores for rheumatoid arthritis have been developed and validated in recent years. They allow the longitudinal documentation of the effectiveness of treatment. Application of these scores in routine daily practice could significantly improve the effectiveness of therapy with relatively little effort. This review presents evidence for the benefits of the application disease activity scores in clinical routine.
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Article I have mastered the challenge of living with a chronic disease: life stories of people with rheumatoid arthritis. 2008
Stamm T, Lovelock L, Stew G, Nell V, Smolen J, Jonsson H, Sadlo G, Machold K. · Vienna Medical University, Vienna, Austria. · Qual Health Res. · Pubmed #18420538 No free full text.
Abstract: Our aim with this study was to explore the narrative life story of individuals diagnosed with rheumatoid arthritis. An open qualitative approach, namely narrative biographic methodology, was applied to include the life context of the participants and to deliberately exclude predefinitions of concepts. Ten people with rheumatoid arthritis who retired early because of the disease participated and were interviewed three times according to a narrative biographic interview style. The biographical data and the interview texts were analyzed both individually and in comparison to each other. Some participants regarded rheumatoid arthritis as a challenge for mastery in their lives, whereas others adapted to the disease and "made the best out of a bad situation." Especially in countries where the medical model predominates in health care, our findings can be used to broaden the current view that some health professionals have toward patients, and stress the importance of patients being self-responsible.
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