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Juvenile rheumatoid arthritis

Postgraduate Medicine, 1977
Juvenile rheumatoid arthritis is the condition of chronic synovitis in children. This Condition was first well described in the English literature by George Frederick Still,1 an English pediatrician and pathologist, who in 1897 described 22 children with chronic arthritis who had come to his attention while he was still in training at the Hospital for ...
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Juvenile rheumatoid arthritis

Arthritis & Rheumatism, 1966
The early diagnosis of JRA rests on the recognition of three distinct modes of onset that are important in preventing deformity, blindness, and even death. Systemic onset is characterized by typical systemic manifestations, particularly high spiking fever and the rheumatoid rash, polyarticular onset is noted by arthritis of more than four joints, and ...
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JUVENILE RHEUMATOID ARTHRITIS

Pediatrics, 1948
Twenty-eight cases of juvenile rheumatoid arthritis have been observed over a period of 14 years. The results prove that a high proportion of these patients recover completely and that the older pessimistic prognosis is not justified. The etiologic factors, the clinical characteristics, the differential diagnosis, and treatment of the disease have been
L M, LOCKIE, B M, NORCROSS
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Juvenile chronic arthritis

Current Orthopaedics, 1986
Juvenile Chronic Arthritis is a relatively uncommon childhood disease. There are no absolute diagnostic tests and many classification criteria have evolved (4, 15, 7) based variably on joint number, disease course, associated clinical features and rheumatoid factor seropositivity.
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Juvenile rheumatoid arthritis

Current Opinion in Rheumatology, 2000
A satisfactory classification of arthritis in childhood has still to be defined, and a system that can facilitate communication among physicians has been proposed by an international committee. The immunopathogenesis of the diseases that are encompassed by the term juvenile rheumatoid arthritis is complex, and many studies have investigated the role of
Falcini F, CIMAZ, ROLANDO
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Juvenile chronic arthritis

Best Practice & Research Clinical Rheumatology, 1995
The nomenclature and classification criteria for arthritis in children should be dealt with initially as separate issues, although they are undoubtedly intertwined. The classification criteria should aim to delineate homogeneous patient populations, yet should be flexible enough to incorporate advances in disease knowledge. It should be recognized that
T R, Southwood, P, Woo
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Autoantibodies in juvenile arthritis

Seminars in Arthritis and Rheumatism, 1984
Sera from 104 children with JA with different onset-types of disease were evaluated for 19S IgM RF by the LFT , hidden 19S IgM RF by the hemolytic assay, ANA by HEp-2 cell substrate, and levels of IC by the C1qSPA . Their relationship to active disease was determined. Classical 19S IgM RF were detected by the LFT in only seven patients.
T L, Moore   +7 more
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Juvenile Chronic Arthritis

Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research, 1987
Juvenile chronic arthritis is a heterogenous group of diseases in which the common denominator is a persistent arthritis in one or more joints commencing before the age of 16 and lasting three months or more. The care of these patients by a pediatric rheumatologist, an orthopedic surgeon, and a full rehabilitation team must be combined to afford the ...
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Juvenile idiopathic arthritis

The Lancet, 2007
Juvenile idiopathic arthritis is a broad term that describes a clinically heterogeneous group of arthritides of unknown cause, which begin before 16 years of age. This term encompasses several disease categories, each of which has distinct methods of presentation, clinical signs, and symptoms, and, in some cases, genetic background.
RAVELLI, ANGELO, MARTINI, ALBERTO
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Juvenile rheumatoid arthritis

Current Problems in Pediatrics, 1994
Juvenile rheumatoid arthritis (JRA), like many chronic diseases of childhood, presents children and families with challenges from physical disability and its resulting consequences. Because medication alone is insufficient in providing the best possible care, coordinated services from occupational and physical therapists, physicians, nurses, and social
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