J Rheumatol
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To develop and validate a cross cultural version of the Arthritis Impact Measurement Scales 2 (AIMS2) to be used by French speaking populations. ⋯ This cross cultural adaptation of AIMS2 in French is valid, reliable, and responsive in patients with RA in whom MTX therapy is instituted. It would permit international comparison studies. This study provides evidence for construct validity and responsiveness of the original version of the AIMS2, not demonstrated previously.
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Case Reports
Sjögren's syndrome presenting as hypokalemic paralysis due to distal renal tubular acidosis.
A 57-year-old woman presented with a flaccid paralysis, muscle tenderness, and respiratory depression. Laboratory results demonstrated severe hypokalemia with hyperchloremic metabolic acidosis and abnormally acidified urine. ⋯ The patient fully recovered after potassium and alkali replacement. Further investigation revealed Sjögren's syndrome as the underlying cause of DRTA.
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Case Reports
Non-giant cell arteritis of the temporal artery presenting as the polymyalgia rheumatica-temporal arteritis syndrome.
We describe a heterogeneous group of 4 elderly patients with atypical vasculitis of the temporal artery who presented clinically with the polymyalgia rheumatica-temporal arteritis syndrome. The first had apparently isolated eosinophilic necrotizing vasculitis without peripheral blood eosinophilia, history of asthma, or pulmonary vasculitis (so called limited form of Churg-Strauss syndrome). Temporal artery biopsy in the 2nd patient revealed small vessel necrotizing vasculitis in the fragment of skeletal muscle surrounding a normal temporal artery (i.e., negative for giant cell arteritis, GCA). ⋯ The temporal artery biopsies in the remaining 2 patients showed vasa vasorum vasculitis, without GCA, associated with malignancy in Patient 3 and as an unexpected and apparently isolated finding in Patient 4. All 4 patients responded to the standard corticosteroid therapy for giant cell temporal arteritis. Unusual temporal artery biopsies such as these should be interpreted in relation to clinical findings.
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To assess cartilage matrix quality variation by anatomical location and extent of osteoarthritis (OA) using quantitative magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and to compare the anatomic MR morphologic features with corresponding histological findings. ⋯ Topological quantitative MRI relaxation time assessment demonstrates increasing cartilage matrix quality variation with OA progression.
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To evaluate the factor structure of the Coping Strategies Questionnaire (CSQ) in patients with fibromyalgia (FM) and to compare the factors derived from this measure, along with the active and passive pain coping scales of the Pain Management Inventory (PMI) in predicting pain, depression, quality of well being (QWB), and pain behavior concurrently and over time. ⋯ The results show the import of the pain coping construct in FM and highlight the negative contribution of low perceived control over pain and high active coping to a range of pain outcomes. The findings on low perceived control converge with data on other chronic pain populations, while the role of active coping appears to be detrimental in FM, in contrast to its positive effects in patients with rheumatoid arthritis.