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Pain in children with rheumatic diseases

Current Rheumatology Reports, 2006
Pain is common in rheumatic diseases in children. Despite recent advances in arthritis treatment, pain continues to be a problem impacting daily functioning and quality of life, and no standard of care for pain management exists. The pathogenesis of pain in children with rheumatic diseases is multifactorial, and treatment of the disease alone may not ...
Yukiko, Kimura, Gary A, Walco
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Pulmonary Manifestations of Rheumatic Diseases in Children

Pediatric Clinics of North America, 2021
Children with rheumatic disease have rare pulmonary manifestations that may cause significant morbidity and mortality. These children are often clinically asymptomatic until disease has significantly progressed, so they should be screened for pulmonary involvement.
Mary M, Buckley, C Egla, Rabinovich
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Genetic diseases with rheumatic manifestations in children

Current Opinion in Rheumatology, 1998
Many nonrheumatic diseases of childhood present with musculoskeletal abnormalities. A significant proportion of these disorders have a genetic basis, many involving defects in structural proteins of the connective tissue. Chief among these are collagen mutations resulting in spondyloepiphyseal dysplasias and Ehlers-Danlos syndrome, as well as fibrillin
S, Prahalad, R A, Colbert
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Otolaryngological manifestations of rheumatic diseases in children

International Journal of Pediatric Otorhinolaryngology, 2009
Rheumatic diseases represent a group of autoimmune conditions which primarily affect the musculo-skeletal system but can also involve other internal organs such as the auditory and the respiratory systems. Among the rheumatic diseases of children those which present an otolaryngological involvement at disease onset or during their course are ...
ZULIAN F, SARI M, DE FILIPPIS, COSIMO
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Response to metyrapone in children with rheumatic diseases

The Journal of Pediatrics, 1966
The response to metyrapone was studied in 11 children with rheumatic diseases, none of whom were receiving anti-inflammatory drugs. “Pituitary reserve” was evaluated by measuring the response of urinary 17-hydroxycorticosteroid excretion to the administration of metyrapone.
R H, Ruvalcaba   +3 more
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Management of rheumatic diseases in children

The Indian Journal of Pediatrics, 1996
Rheumatic diseases are one of the common groups of chronic diseases of childhood. They are multifactorial in origin and tend to involve multiple organ systems. Consequently management of these diseases requires the expertise of many health and allied health professionals.
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Functional Measures in Children with Rheumatic Diseases

Pediatric Clinics of North America, 1995
The measurement of function in children with rheumatic diseases is an intimate part of not only the initial diagnostic work-up, but also of every clinic visit during the course of these chronic diseases. This article focuses on the development of specific and general instruments used to systematically measure function and thus, outcome of the rheumatic
K J, Murray, M H, Passo
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Rheumatic fever and rheumatic heart disease in children in North India

The Indian Journal of Pediatrics, 1972
Data on 118 cases of rheumatic fever and rheumatic heart disease in the age group of 4–14 years are reported. 52.8% gave a past history of rheumatic fever or rheumatic heart disease. 72% cases showed evidence of rheumatie activity. Carditis was the commonest lesion seen in 71% patients. 56.8% cases were in congestive heart failure.
C M, Mahajan   +3 more
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Electrocardiograms in rheumatic heart disease in children

The American Journal of Medicine, 1946
Abstract Analysis of the electrocardiographic findings in ninety-seven cases of rheumatic heart disease revealed the following: (1) 86 per cent of cases: S and Q waves of the cross type present; (2) 33 per cent of cases: lengthened P-R interval; (3) 32 per cent of cases: T 2 and, to a lesser extent, T 1 waves large; (4) 24 per cent of cases ...
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Infection and chronic rheumatic disease in children

Seminars in Arthritis and Rheumatism, 1980
It is clear that various microbial agents can cause acute and chronic rheumatic disease by several mechanisms, that different agents, some perhaps yet unknown, may cause the same disease in different patients, and that genetic factors are important, perhaps crucial, to this host response.
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