Objective: To determine demographic and epidemiologic characteristics in children with unexplained joint pain.
Methods: The study population included 730 children (< 18 yrs of age) referred between 1981 and 2007 to the Saskatchewan Pediatric Rheumatology Program, University of Saskatchewan, because of arthralgia. Parents and patients completed a questionnaire at the time of initial presentation, and a diagnosis of unexplained arthralgia was assigned based on clinical assessment. Serum vitamin D levels were measured in 73 patients diagnosed with arthralgia.
Results: Subjects with arthralgia were more likely to report psychosocial stresses including family discord and illness in the family, and to be cared for by a single parent as a consequence of parental separation or death. Significantly more patients reported fall and winter (30%) as the season of symptom onset compared to spring or summer (20%; p = 0.01). Significantly more survey respondents in the arthralgia group reported missing school compared to the control group (62% vs 31%; p = 0.001). Referrals from northern Saskatchewan were significantly more numerous than from southern Saskatchewan (107 vs 45 per 100,000; p < 0.001). Serum vitamin D concentrations measured in a subgroup of patients (n = 73) showed that 62 (82%) were abnormally low, 42% between 50 and 75 nmol/l (insufficient), and 40% < 50 nmol/l (deficient).
Conclusion: Our results suggest an association between psychosocial stress, school absenteeism, vitamin D insufficiency, and unexplained arthralgia in children.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.3899/jrheum.080358 | DOI Listing |
Int J Surg Case Rep
November 2024
Juárez University of the State of Durango, Mexico. Electronic address:
Introduction And Importance: The Autoimmune/inflammatory Syndrome Induced by Adjuvants (ASIA) is a recently recognized entity characterized by a constellation of nonspecific symptoms that develop after exposure to adjuvants. Adjuvants can include vaccines, silicone, and other foreign substances. Here, we present the case of a 31-year-old woman who developed ASIA syndrome following breast implants and booster vaccinations, emphasizing the diagnostic challenges and treatment considerations.
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September 2024
Internal Medicine, National Guard Health Affairs, Riyadh, SAU.
Curr Sports Med Rep
September 2024
Family and Sports Medicine, Uniformed Services University, Travis AFB, CA.
Pediatric hip pain can have orthopedic, infectious, inflammatory, neoplastic, or nonmusculoskeletal etiologies. Organizing the differential diagnosis by symptom chronicity and a determination of intraarticular versus extraarticular pain, as well as the age at pain onset, can be helpful to hone in on the cause. Clinicians should consider plain radiographs in cases of acute trauma, with concern for bony pathology, or in patients with unexplained limp or hip pain, with musculoskeletal ultrasound and magnetic resonance imaging used as advanced imaging when indicated.
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