Topic Overview
What is juvenile idiopathic arthritis?
Juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA) is a childhood disease that causes
inflamed, swollen joints. This makes joints stiff and painful. The term "juvenile idiopathic arthritis" is replacing the American "juvenile rheumatoid arthritis" and the European "juvenile chronic arthritis."
Some children with JIA
grow out of it after they get treatment. Others will need ongoing treatment as
adults.
There are several types of JIA.
-
Oligoarticular
(formerly known as pauciarticular) is the most common form. It is
often the mildest type. In this type, 1 to 4 joints are affected in the
first 6 months of the disease. If 4 or fewer joints continue to be affected after the first 6 months, it is called persistent oligoarthritis.
If more joints become affected after 6 months, it is called extended oligoarthritis. Your child may have pain in the knees,
ankles, fingers, toes, wrists, elbows, or hips.
-
Polyarticular
affects 5 or more joints
in the first 6 months of symptoms and tends to get worse over time. It can be severe. It may be more like rheumatoid arthritis in adults.
-
Systemic
can be the most serious. It causes pain in many
joints. It can also spread to organs.
-
Enthesitis-related
most often affects the areas where tendons and ligaments attach to bones (the enthesis). The joints may also be affected.
- Psoriatic usually combines joint tenderness and inflammation with psoriasis of the skin or problems with nails.
What causes JIA?
Doctors don't really know what causes the
disease. But there are a number of things that they think can lead to it. These
things include:
- An
immune system that is too active and attacks joint
tissues.
- Viruses or other infections that cause the immune system
to attack joint tissues.
- Having certain
genes that make the immune system more likely to
attack joint tissues.
What are the symptoms?
Children can have one or many symptoms, such as:
- Joint pain.
- Joint
swelling.
- Joint stiffness.
- Trouble
sleeping.
- Problems walking.
- Fever.
- Rash.
In some cases these symptoms can be mild and hard for you
to see. A young child may be more cranky than normal. Or a child may go back to crawling
after he or she has started walking. Your child's joints may feel stiff in the morning. Or your child may have trouble walking.
Children with this disease
can also get inflammatory
eye disease. This can lead to permanent vision
problems or blindness if it's not treated. Eye disease often has no symptoms
before vision loss occurs.
How is JIA diagnosed?
Your doctor will ask
questions about your child's symptoms and past health and will do a physical
exam. Your child may also have blood tests and a urine test to look for signs
of the disease. If your child has the disease, these tests can help your doctor
find out which type it is.
How is it treated?
Your child's treatment will be
based on the type of JIA he or she has, and how serious it is.
-
Nonsteroidal
anti-inflammatory drugs
(NSAIDs) reduce pain and inflammation. If they don't work well enough, other medicines are used.
- Exercise and physical therapy help keep your child's
muscles flexible and strong.
- Occupational therapy helps your child live as independently as possible.
- Surgery to correct joint problems is only done in rare
cases.
Even when JIA isn't severe, your child may still need long-term
treatment. To make sure that treatment is right for your child, work closely
with the medical team. Learn as much as you can about your child's disease and
treatments. Stay on a schedule with your child's medicines and exercise.
How do you cope with JIA?
Take good physical care of yourself so that you can help your child through the more difficult periods of illness. Consider finding a support group of families who live with juvenile idiopathic arthritis. Your local chapter of the Arthritis Foundation can provide classes and support group information.
Frequently Asked Questions
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Learning about juvenile idiopathic arthritis:
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Being diagnosed:
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Getting treatment:
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Ongoing concerns:
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Living with juvenile idiopathic arthritis:
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Cause
The cause of
juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA) isn't well
understood. Most experts believe it is caused by a combination of things,
including:
- An
immune system that is too active and attacks joint
tissues.
- Viruses or other infections that cause the immune system
to attack joint tissues.
- Having certain
genes that make the immune system more likely to
attack joint tissues.
Symptoms
The most common symptoms of all forms of
juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA) include:
- Joint pain and swelling. They may come and go,
but they are most often persistent.
- Joint stiffness in the
morning.
- Irritability, refusal to walk, or protecting or guarding
a joint. You might notice your child limping or trying not to use a certain
joint.
- Often unpredictable changes in symptoms, from periods with no
symptoms (remission) to flare-ups.
Even though pain is a common symptom of JIA, your child may not be able to describe the pain. Or he or she may
be used to the pain. To know if your child is in pain, look for changes such as stiff movements, rubbing a joint or muscle, or avoiding movement.
Other symptoms vary depending on
which type of JIA your child has.
Systemic JIA
can cause fever spikes and rash.
- The fever usually reaches
103°F (39.5°C) to
106°F (41°C) once or twice a day. It falls to normal between spikes.
- The rash is spotty, flat, and sometimes faint red or pink. It may occur
with the fever. It may be on the torso, face, palms, soles of the feet, and
armpits. The rash often comes and goes. It may appear late in the day or in the
early morning. It may also be brought on by warm baths or by rubbing or
scratching the skin.
Other conditions with symptoms similar
to JIA include
growing pains, overuse, injury, bone infection, and
certain inflammatory diseases. Many conditions can cause painful,
stiff joints in children. Most often, occasional joint pain in children is
related to an injury or aggravating factors, such as repetitive overuse in
sports activities. JIA is a fairly uncommon cause of these symptoms.
What Happens
The course of
juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA) is unpredictable,
especially during the first few years after a child is diagnosed. JIA can be mild, causing few problems. It can get worse or disappear without
clear reason. Over time, the pattern of symptoms becomes more predictable. Most
children have good and bad days.
Of all children who have JIA, 3 or 4
out of 10 children will have long-term disability.1
Long-term disability may
range from occasional stiffness, the need for pain medicine, and limits on
physical activity to ongoing JIA and the need for major surgery such as
joint replacement. But for most adults who had JIA as children, any long-term
problems tend to be mild and don't affect their overall quality of life.
A child's long-term outlook depends on the type of JIA he or she has. For example, while a child with
oligoarticular JIA has a
good long-term outlook other than eye disease risk, a child with
polyarticular JIA or
systemic JIA has a greater chance of long-term problems.2
Treatment also affects the child's long-term outlook. If treatment is started early, there is less long-term disability, and the tissues may heal over time.2
Types of JIA
-
Oligoarticular JIA (oligoarthritis): Up to 60 out of 100 children with JIA have this form.2 They may continue to have the disease as adults. This risk is higher if more joints are affected after the first 6 months.
-
Polyarticular JIA (polyarthritis): This type
of JIA is more severe than most cases of oligoarticular JIA. That's because polyarticular JIA affects more joints,
and it tends to get worse over time. About 30 out of 100 children
affected by JIA have this form.2 Many children will have active disease that continues into adulthood. There are two types: rheumatoid factor-positive (RF-positive) and rheumatoid factor-negative (RF-negative).
-
Systemic JIA: About 10 out of 100 children
affected by JIA have the systemic form.2 Many will continue to have active disease as adults. While some children have one course of this disease that lasts 2 to 4 years, others continue to have mild joint pain and flares of other symptoms. A few have ongoing destructive arthritis, often into adulthood, even with treatment.2
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Enthesitis-related JIA: About 10 out of 100 children with JIA have this form. The long-term outlook for this form of JIA is less well known. Some children progress to other conditions such as adult ankylosing spondylitis. This is more common in boys who have hip arthritis.
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Psoriatic JIA: This is the least common form, occurring in fewer than 10 out of 100 children with JIA. Children with psoriatic arthritis have a skin condition called psoriasis. The long-term outcome for this type of JIA isn't well known. Some children continue to have skin and joint symptoms. For a few, the ability to do daily activities can become limited.
Learn more about the symptoms and what happens in the types of JIA.
Complications
Complications associated with JIA
can include:
-
Inflammatory eye disease, such as
uveitis. Children and adults with this condition can
develop
cataracts,
glaucoma,
corneal degeneration (band keratopathy), or vision
loss.
-
Growth abnormalities. These include unequal leg lengths, an
imbalance in growth of the jaw, and temporary delay in breast
growth.
- Joint damage. This is common in the polyarticular form of
JIA and can occur early. About 30 to 50 out of 100 children with JIA may have some level of
disability that continues into adulthood.2 Long-term problems can be mild and have little effect on daily activities.
Some children with polyarthritis get arthritis in the
neck that can cause the neck bones to fuse together.
Complications of systemic JIA include heart or lung problems, such as
pericarditis,
pleuritis, or
pericardial effusion. A rare lung complication is the
formation of scar tissue in the lungs (pulmonary fibrosis).
What Increases Your Risk
No clear risk factors for
juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA) are known at this
time. It may run in families.
When To Call a Doctor
Call your doctor immediately if:
- Your child has sudden, unexplained swelling,
redness, and pain in any joint or joints.
- A baby or child is
unusually cranky or reluctant to crawl or walk.
- Red eyes, eye pain,
and blurring or loss of vision occur in a child who has been diagnosed with any
form of juvenile arthritis.
Call your doctor if any of the following symptoms continue
for more than 2 days:
- A child has unexplained daily fever spikes
[103°F (39.4°C) to
106°F (41.1°C)] with or without
a pink skin rash.
- A baby or child is reluctant to crawl or walk in
the early morning but improves after 1 to 2 hours.
- A child taking aspirin or another nonsteroidal
anti-inflammatory drug (NSAID) develops stomach pain not clearly related to
stomach flu, but possibly related to medicine use. (Symptoms may include heartburn,
nausea, or refusal to eat.)
- Joint pain and skin rash develop
following a sore throat.
It can be hard to know when an infant has joint
pain. A young child may be unusually cranky or may revert to crawling after he
or she has started walking. You may notice gait problems with a walking child
or stiffness in the morning.
Who to see
For a first check of joint pain and other
symptoms of
juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA), consult with
a:
For more testing and disease management, consult
with a
rheumatologist who specializes in children's rheumatic
disease (pediatric rheumatologist).
The disease management team
for JIA may also include:
- An
orthopedic surgeon who specializes in children's
orthopedic problems (pediatric
orthopedist).
- Nurses.
- Physical and occupational
therapists.
- A registered dietitian, as
needed.
- A social worker or psychologist, as needed.
- A
general dentist and an orthodontist, as needed.
- An
ophthalmologist.
To prepare for your appointment, see the topic Making the Most of Your Appointment.
Exams and Tests
Findings from a physical exam,
including the pattern and nature of joint symptoms, are important keys to the
diagnosis of
juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA). Lab tests may be used to support the diagnosis and make sure symptoms aren't caused by another health problem. JIA is often diagnosed only after other possible causes of symptoms have been ruled out and the pain and stiffness have lasted for at least 6 weeks.
Routine exams and
tests include the following:
The following tests are done if needed:
Your doctor will probably schedule routine checkups to see how your child is doing and how well treatment is working. This will include talking about inflammatory eye disease and exams for this disease, such as a slit lamp eye exam.
Treatment Overview
Treatment goals for
juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA) are to reduce your
child's joint pain and to prevent disability. Physical therapy and medicine are
the basis of medical treatment for JIA.
Treatment depends on the type and severity of JIA. Even when JIA is uncomplicated, an affected child may need years
of medical treatment or checkups. To make sure that your child's care is appropriate for the stage of disease, work
closely with the medical team. Learn as much as you can about your child's disease and treatments. And stay on
schedule with medicine and exercise.
Your doctor will set up a treatment team. It may include a pediatrician, an ophthalmologist, a rheumatologist, and a physical and/or
occupational therapist.
Physical therapy
Treatment may include:
To learn more, see Home Treatment and Other Treatment.
Medicines
Medicine will
likely be an important part of your child's treatment.
To learn more, see Medications.
Follow-up
Treatment depends on the type and severity of JIA. Even when JIA is uncomplicated, an affected child may need years of medical treatment or checkups. To make sure that your child's care is appropriate
for the stage of disease, work closely with the medical team. Learn as much as
you can about your child's disease and treatments. And stay on schedule with
medicine and exercise.
Inflammatory eye disease may develop in children with
JIA. This form of eye disease generally has no symptoms and can lead to
a permanent decrease in vision or blindness. So part of your child's treatment
plan should be regular checkups with an
ophthalmologist.
What to think about
Surgery may be used in a very small number of children with JIA who have severe joint deformity, loss of movement, or pain.
Some children with JIA have no appetite, so malnutrition becomes a medical concern. If
your child has little appetite for food, see a nutritionist for help.
Prevention
The cause of
juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA) isn't well
understood, and there is no way to prevent it. But you can help prevent symptoms. See Home Treatment.
Home Treatment
You can do a lot at home to help your child lead a normal life, relieve his or her symptoms, and prevent complications.
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Do range-of-motion exercises. These help maintain your child's joint range
and muscle strength. They also prevent
contractures. You may need to help an infant or younger child do the exercises.
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Find a balance between rest and activity. Your child may need extra naps or quiet time to rest the joints
and regain strength. But too much rest may lead to weakness in
unused muscles.
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Partner with school staff. You can plan creative ways of dealing with JIA-caused limitations. This
can help your child make the best of his or her abilities.
- Stick to a medicine schedule. An older child may find it easier to remember to take
medicine by using a pillbox or chart for a day's or week's worth of medicine.
Ask your doctor if the dosage can be adjusted so your child can
take it at times that are most convenient and won't make him or her feel
"different." To avoid stomach upset, you can also give nonsteroidal
anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) with meals or a small snack.
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Use assistive devices. These can help
your child hold on to, open, close, move, or do things more easily. Devices include Velcro fasteners and enlarged handles. Getting your child lightweight clothing and toys will also help.
- Make sure your child sees the doctor regularly. He or she should also have eye exams with an ophthalmologist. Inflammatory eye disease can develop
as a complication in children with JIA.
Dealing with stiffness
- Apply heat to stiff and painful joints
for 20 minutes, repeating as needed. You can use hot water bottles or heating
pads on a low-to-medium setting. Or make hot packs from towels dipped in warm
water or wet towels microwaved for 15 to 30 seconds. Don't leave a small child
unattended with a heating pad. Always make sure that heating pads, hot water
bottles, and hot packs aren't too hot for your child's skin. Do not use heat if your child's joint are red and warm.
- Many children who have
JIA have less stiffness in the morning if their joints are kept warm during the
night. To help keep joints warm, try footed pajamas, thermal underwear, a sleeping bag, a heated water
bed, or an electric blanket.
- Encourage your
child to take a warm bath or shower first thing in the morning. It can help ease
stiffness. Have your child stretch gently afterward.
- Give morning
medicines as early as possible, with a snack or breakfast, to prevent upsetting
an empty stomach.
Help yourself to help your child
Living with
JIA often means making lifestyle
changes and adjustments. This can be frustrating and demanding for you, your
child, and your family. Here are a few steps to help yourself:
- Learn about the disease. Knowing more about it will help you and your child have less
fear, make better decisions, and have better results.
- Work as a team with
your child's doctors and other health professionals. The outlook is better when you and your child actively manage your child's health.
- Take good physical care of yourself so that you can help your child
through the more difficult periods of illness. Consider becoming involved with
a support group of families who live with JIA. Your
local chapter of the Arthritis Foundation can provide classes and support-group
information.
- Remember that many children with JIA don't have long-term
disease and disability. They go on to lead healthy adult lives.
Medications
Most children with
juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA) need to take
medicine to reduce inflammation and control pain and to help prevent more
damage to the joints. When inflammation and pain are controlled, a child is
more willing and able to do joint exercises to improve joint strength and
prevent loss of movement.
Many different medicines are used to
treat JIA. No single medicine works for every child. Your doctor will try to find medicine that helps relieve symptoms and that has few side effects. This may take some time
Medicine choices
Although treatment varies depending on the needs of each child, certain medicines are often tried first (first-line
medicines), while others are often saved to try later if they are needed
(second-line medicines).
Medicines tried first
-
Nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs). Naproxen is the most often
used NSAID treatment for JIA because of its low
incidence of side effects compared to its effectiveness.3 Ibuprofen may be used instead. But in general, less
than one-third of children will have significant relief from NSAIDs.1 If you see no
improvement after 6 weeks, your doctor may try a different NSAID.
Medicines tried later
-
Corticosteroids. Injections can be used for children who have
just a few joints affected or who have enthesitis. Steroid medicines by mouth or through an IV are often used for
widespread joint pain or systemic problems such as fever or pericarditis. Steroid medicines work faster than some other drugs, so they may also be used until other medicines start working.
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Disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs (DMARDs). These are also called slow-acting antirheumatic drugs (SAARDs). They include:
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Antimalarials, such as hydroxychloroquine.
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Adult therapies, such as other cytotoxic (cell-destroying)
drugs and intravenous human immunoglobulin. These may be used for rheumatoid
arthritis in adults. But they aren't yet proved to be safe and effective for
children with JIA.
Medicines to treat inflammatory eye disease
What to think about
Gold salts were one of the first treatments used for
joint inflammation. You may still hear about them. But injected gold salts
have been replaced by methotrexate for the treatment of JIA. Gold salts taken
by mouth (oral) have not been shown to be effective for JIA.3
Some children with JIA gain significant benefit from early methotrexate
treatment, and this treatment is becoming
more common in an effort to prevent joint and eye damage. Early treatment with
methotrexate is often used for polyarticular JIA.1
Biologic therapy is a newer option to treat
JIA that doesn't respond to other treatments.
Biologics such as etanercept have had some success in relieving symptoms and decreasing the number of flare-ups.
Combination therapy—such as using methotrexate
with sulfasalazine, hydroxychloroquine, or etanercept—has been used on a
limited basis to treat JIA. Most medical experience with combination therapy is
with adults. Only children with severe JIA that has not improved with
methotrexate or sulfasalazine are considered for combination treatment.
If your child is on aspirin therapy
Yearly flu shots are recommended
for children who are on long-term aspirin therapy. Children on long-term
aspirin therapy who get
chickenpox or the
flu are at risk for getting Reye
syndrome. Although there is a risk, Reye syndrome is very rare. Very few
cases have been reported in children with chronic arthritis
who were being treated with aspirin. If your child has been exposed to
chickenpox or the flu, talk to the doctor about giving your child acetaminophen to
control pain and relieve fever until the incubation period, or the illness
itself, has passed.
Surgery
Surgical treatment may be used in a very small
number of children whose juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA) has caused severe
joint deformity, loss of movement, or pain.
The main things to think about for surgery during childhood are the child's age and whether his or her bones are still growing. If at all possible, joint reconstruction is delayed until
childhood bone growth is complete (at about 18 years of age).
Surgery choices
When surgery to correct joint deformity is needed, the
more common procedures include:
Other surgical procedures for JIA are recommended only in selected cases. These include:
- Osteotomy, which
involves removing a wedge of bone to allow more normal alignment of the joint.
It may be recommended for children who have severe joint
contractures.
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Epiphysiodesis
. In this surgery, the portion where growth occurs is removed in order
to stop growth.
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Synovectomy or tenosynovectomy. These are rarely used for JIA. Synovectomy involves the removal of the joint lining (synovium) and/or the covering of the tendon
(tenosynovectomy) to reduce joint inflammation.
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Arthrodesis
. This is rarely used in children. It involves
fusing two bones in a diseased joint so that the joint can no longer
move.
Other Treatment
Other treatment for juvenile idiopathic arthritis (JIA) includes physical and
occupational therapy, healthy eating, pain management, and some complementary therapies.
Physical and occupational therapy
Physical therapy will be an important part of
treatment if your child has severe JIA. The
physical therapist can help set up an exercise program
for your child, either for the child to do alone or to do with help from an
adult. Exercises should be done every day and should be regularly reviewed by the
physical therapist.3 The therapist will make sure that the
exercises are being done correctly. He or she can decide whether any exercises should be
added, dropped, or changed.
Occupational therapy helps a child live as independently as possible.
Any of the following may be used in physical or occupational therapy:
- Physical conditioning. It may include aerobic
exercise, range-of-motion exercises, and strength and stretching
exercises.
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Stretching and strengthening exercises. They can help a child maintain strength and a normal
range of motion.
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Splinting at night. Splinting will help keep the
wrist, hand, knee, and/or ankle joints straight. This may prevent pain,
morning stiffness, and contractures. Working splints can help support a joint
and relieve pain during writing or other hand tasks.
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Serial casting of the knees, ankles, wrists, fingers, and/or elbows. This is a
temporary straightening and casting of the affected joint. The cast is then
removed, and the child goes through some physical therapy. Then a new cast is
applied with the joint stretched a bit more.
- Shoe lifts or inserts. These help to equalize leg lengths for children in whom one
leg grows at a different rate than the other. For some types of inflammation in the feet, you can try using shoe inserts that transfer your weight onto your heel. This takes weight off the sore middle or front part of the foot.
Healthy eating
Healthy eating means eating a variety
of foods so that your child gets the nutrients he or she needs for growth and
development. Good nutrition may also help fight the effects of JIA. Your
child can eat all types of food as long as his or her weekly intake is balanced
and varied.
Talk to your child's doctor about healthy foods for children with JIA. There are a few nutrients that may be helpful. These include:
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Vitamin D and calcium, which can help
control bone loss that is often linked with inactivity and with corticosteroid
treatment.
- Vitamin C, which is an antioxidant that may help
reduce inflammation in the body. It is found in citrus fruits, tomatoes,
berries, broccoli, cabbage, and brussels sprouts.
- Omega-3 fatty
acids in fish oil, which have been shown to mildly reduce inflammation in adults with
rheumatoid arthritis. They may have the same effect in children who have JIA. The
best sources of omega-3 fatty acids are cold-water fish and flaxseed
oil.4
Pain management
Complementary medicine therapies for pain management
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Massage is used to promote relaxation,
relieve pain, and restore normal joint movement.
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Guided imagery may be used to promote relaxation and manage
pain.
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Acupuncture is mildly effective in relieving pain in
adults who have rheumatoid arthritis. It may help relieve pain in children who
have JIA, but this has not been proved.
Other Places To Get Help
Organizations
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American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons
(AAOS)
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| 6300 North River Road |
| Rosemont, IL 60018-4262 |
| Phone: |
1-800-346-AAOS (1-800-346-2267) (847) 823-7186 |
| Fax: |
(847) 823-8125 |
| Email: |
orthoinfo@aaos.org |
| Web Address: |
www.orthoinfo.aaos.org |
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The American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons (AAOS)
provides information and education to raise the public's awareness of
musculoskeletal conditions, with an emphasis on preventive measures. The AAOS
website contains information on orthopedic conditions and treatments, injury
prevention, and wellness and exercise.
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American College of Rheumatology
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| 2200 Lake Boulevard NE |
| Atlanta, GA 30319 |
| Phone: |
(404) 633-3777 |
| Fax: |
(404) 633-1870 |
| Web Address: |
www.rheumatology.org |
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The American College of Rheumatology (ACR) and the
Association of Rheumatology Health Professionals (ARHP, a division of ACR) are
professional organizations of rheumatologists and associated health
professionals who are dedicated to healing, preventing disability from, and
curing the many types of arthritis and related disabling and sometimes fatal
disorders of the joints, muscles, and bones. Members of the ACR are physicians;
members of the ARHP include research scientists, nurses, physical and
occupational therapists, psychologists, and social workers. Both the ACR and
the ARHP provide professional education for their members.
The ACR
website offers patient information fact sheets about rheumatic diseases, about
medicines used to treat rheumatic diseases, and about care
professionals.
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Arthritis Foundation
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| P.O. Box 7669 |
| Atlanta, GA 30357 |
| Phone: |
1-800-283-7800 |
| Web Address: |
www.arthritis.org |
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The Arthritis Foundation provides grants to help find a
cure, prevention methods, and better treatment options for arthritis. It also
provides a large number of community-based services nationwide to make living
with arthritis easier, including self-help courses; water- and land-based
exercise classes; support groups; home study groups; instructional videotapes;
public forums; free educational brochures and booklets; the national, bimonthly
consumer magazine Arthritis Today; and continuing
education courses and publications for health professionals.
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KidsHealth for Parents, Children, and
Teens
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| 10140 Centurion Parkway |
| Jacksonville, FL 32256 |
| Phone: |
(904) 697-4100 |
| Fax: |
(904) 697-4220 |
| Web Address: |
www.kidshealth.org |
| |
|
This website is sponsored by the Nemours Foundation. It
has a wide range of information about children's health, from allergies and
diseases to normal growth and development (birth to adolescence). This website
offers separate areas for kids, teens, and parents, each providing
age-appropriate information that the child or parent can understand. You can
sign up to get weekly emails about your area of interest.
|
|
|
National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and
Skin Diseases (NIAMS), National Institutes of Health
|
| 1 AMS Circle |
| Bethesda, MD 20892-3675 |
| Phone: |
1-877-22-NIAMS (1-877-226-4267) toll-free |
| Phone: |
(301) 495-4484 |
| Fax: |
(301) 718-6366 |
| TDD: |
(301) 565-2966 |
| Email: |
niamsinfo@mail.nih.gov |
| Web Address: |
www.niams.nih.gov |
| |
|
The National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal
and Skin Diseases (NIAMS) is a governmental institute that serves the public
and health professionals by providing information, locating other information
sources, and participating in a national federal database of health
information. NIAMS supports research into the causes, treatment, and prevention
of arthritis and musculoskeletal and skin diseases and supports the training of
scientists to carry out this research.
The NIAMS website provides
health information referrals to the NIAMS Clearinghouse, which has information
packages about diseases.
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|
References
Citations
-
Hashkes PJ, Laxer RM (2005). Medical treatment of
juvenile ideopathic arthritis. JAMA, 294(13):
1671–1684.
-
Nistala K, et al. (2009). Juvenile idiopathic arthritis. In
GS Firestein et al., eds., Kelley's Textbook of Rheumatology, 8th ed., vol. 2, pp. 1657–1675. Philadelphia: Saunders
Elsevier.
-
Giannini EH, Brunner HI (2005). Treatment of juvenile
rheumatoid arthritis. In WJ Koopman, LW Moreland, eds., Arthritis and Allied Conditions, 15th ed., vol. 1, pp.
1301–1318. Philadelphia: Lippincott Williams and Wilkins.
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Murray MT, Pizzorno JE Jr (2006). Rheumatoid
arthritis. In JE Pizzorno, MT Murray, eds., Textbook of Natural Medicine, 3rd ed., vol. 2, pp. 2089–2108. St. Louis:
Churchill Livingstone Elsevier.
Other Works Consulted
- Beukelman T, et al. (2011). American college of rheumatology recommendations for the treatment of juvenile idiopathic arthritis: Initiation and safety monitoring of therapeutic agents for the treatment of arthritis and systemic features. Arthritis Care and Research, 63(4): 465–482.
- Duffy CM, et al. (2005). Nomenclature and
classification in chronic childhood arthritis. Arthritis and Rheumatism, 52(2): 382–385.
- Goldmuntz EA, White PH (2006). Juvenile idiopathic arthritis: A review for pediatricians. Pediatrics in Review, 27(4): e24–e32.
- Simon L, et al. (2002). Treatment of pain in children
and older adults with arthritis. In Guideline for the Management of Pain in Osteoarthritis, Rheumatoid Arthritis, and Juvenile Chronic Arthritis, 2nd ed., chap. 5, pp. 119–129. Glenview, IL: American
Pain Society.
- Wilson D, Curry M (2011). The child with musculoskeletal or
articular dysfunction. In MJ Hockenberry, D Wilson, eds., Wong's Nursing Care of Infants and Children, 9th ed., pp. 1619–1688. St. Louis, MO: Mosby
Elsevier.
Credits
|
By
|
Healthwise Staff |
|
Primary Medical Reviewer
|
Susan C. Kim, MD - Pediatrics |
|
Specialist Medical Reviewer
|
John Pope, MD - Pediatrics |
|
Last Revised
|
June 5, 2012 |
Hashkes PJ, Laxer RM (2005). Medical treatment of
juvenile ideopathic arthritis. JAMA, 294(13):
1671–1684.
Nistala K, et al. (2009). Juvenile idiopathic arthritis. In
GS Firestein et al., eds., Kelley's Textbook of Rheumatology, 8th ed., vol. 2, pp. 1657–1675. Philadelphia: Saunders
Elsevier.
Giannini EH, Brunner HI (2005). Treatment of juvenile
rheumatoid arthritis. In WJ Koopman, LW Moreland, eds., Arthritis and Allied Conditions, 15th ed., vol. 1, pp.
1301–1318. Philadelphia: Lippincott Williams and Wilkins.
Murray MT, Pizzorno JE Jr (2006). Rheumatoid
arthritis. In JE Pizzorno, MT Murray, eds., Textbook of Natural Medicine, 3rd ed., vol. 2, pp. 2089–2108. St. Louis:
Churchill Livingstone Elsevier.