Summer onset arthritis less severe


COPENHAGEN, Denmark, Jun 16, 2009 (UPI via COMTEX) -- Researchers in France
suggest that the season in which rheumatoid arthritis symptoms appear may
indicate the severity of those symptoms.

The findings, presented in Copenhagen at the annual congress of the European
League Against Rheumatism, may help identify patients with rheumatoid arthritis
needing more intensive early therapy.

Study leader Dr. Gael Mouterde of Lapeyronie Hospital in Montpellier, France,
said patients whose first symptoms occur in winter had greater erosion and joint
space narrowing and their symptoms were rated more severe at six months than
those patients whose symptoms appeared in summer.

Similarly, patients' symptoms after six months were worse if their first
symptoms had occurred in winter versus autumn. This effect was not observed at a
12-month follow up. The researchers suggest initial environmental factors
probably exert less of an long-term effect.

"During our study of predictors of radiographic progression, we have unveiled a
distinct relationship between rheumatoid arthritis progression and seasonal
onset and postulate that this could be as a result of either a vitamin D
deficiency or environmental factors, such as winter viruses, influencing protein
citrullination," Mouterde said in a statement.

Anti-citrullinated protein antibodies, Mouterde said, are often found in the
immune systems of rheumatoid arthritis patients and may assist in identifying
patients at a higher risk of developing structural damage.



URL: www.upi.com


Copyright 2009 by United Press International

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