Mayo Clinic determines lifetime risk of adult rheumatoid arthritis
2011-01-06
(Press-News.org) ROCHESTER, Minn. -- Mayo Clinic researchers have determined the lifetime risk of developing rheumatoid arthritis and six other autoimmune rheumatic diseases for both men and women. The findings appear online in Arthritis and Rheumatism.
VIDEO ALERT: Additional audio and video resources, including excerpts from an interview with Cynthia Crowson describing the research, are available on the Mayo Clinic News Blog(http://newsblog.mayoclinic.org/2011/01/05/whats-your-risk-of-developing-rheumatoid-arthritis/)
"We estimated the lifetime risk for rheumatic disease for both sexes, something that had not been done before -- separately or collectively," says Cynthia Crowson Mayo Clinic biostatistician and first author. "Prevalence and incidence rates existed, but prevalence figures underestimate individual risk and incidence rates express only a yearly estimate."
The researchers were looking for an accurate basis to offer an easy-to-understand average risk over a person's lifetime, knowing that risk changes at almost every age. They used data from the Rochester Epidemiology Project, a long-term epidemiology resource based on patients in Olmsted County, Minn. The cohort of 1179, consisted of patients diagnosed between 1955 and 2007, allowed the team to extrapolate the nationwide estimates.
The adult lifetime risk in the United States of having some kind of inflammatory autoimmune disease is 8.4 percent for women and 5.1 percent for men. Based on year 2000 population figures, that means one woman in 12 and one man in 20 will develop one of the conditions in their lifetime. The authors consider that a substantial risk and say their findings should encourage more research on the value of early diagnosis and intervention for people with increased genetic risk of arthritis. They hope the new figures will help in counseling patients and in fundraising efforts to find improved treatments.
The figures below reflect lifetime risk for the respective diseases, based on the Mayo findings.
Disease
Women
Men
Rheumatoid Arthritis (RA)
3.6% or 1 in 28
1.7% or 1 in 59
Polymyalgia Rheumatica
2.4%
1.7%
Systemic Lupus Erythematosus
.9%
.2%
Giant Cell Arteritis
1%
.5%
Psoriatic Arthritis
.5%
.6%
Primary Sjögrens syndrome
.8%
.04%
Ankylosing Spondylitis
.1%
.6%
INFORMATION:
The research was supported by the National Institutes of Health. Other Mayo authors are Eric Matteson, M.D., M.P.H.; Elena Myasoedova, M.D., Ph.D.; Clement Michet, M.D.; Floranne Ernste, M.D.; Kenneth Warrington, M.D.; John Davis III, M.D.; Gene Hunder, M.D.; Terry Therneau, Ph.D.; and Sherine Gabriel, M.D.
About Mayo Clinic
Mayo Clinic is a nonprofit worldwide leader in medical care, research and education for people from all walks of life. For more information, visit www.mayoclinic.org/about/ and www.mayoclinic.org/news.
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
2011-01-06
COLUMBUS, Ohio – Most people like to play it safe when combining colors for an article of clothing or outfit, a new study suggests.
When consumers were asked to choose colors for seven different parts of an athletic shoe, they tended to pick identical or similar colors for nearly every element.
They usually avoided contrasting or even moderately different color combinations.
A red and yellow athletic shoe? Not going to happen. Blue and grey? That's more like it.
This is one of the first studies to show how consumers would choose to combine colors in a realistic ...
2011-01-06
An international team of physicists and neuroscientists has reported a breakthrough in magnetic resonance imaging that allows brain scans more than seven times faster than currently possible.
In a paper that appeared Dec. 20 in the journal PLoS ONE, a University of California, Berkeley, physicist and colleagues from the University of Minnesota and Oxford University in the United Kingdom describe two improvements that allow full three-dimensional brain scans in less than half a second, instead of the typical 2 to 3 seconds.
"When we made the first images, it was unbelievable ...
2011-01-06
Cardiologists at the University of Connecticut Health Center have identified a protein fragment that when detected in the blood can be a predictor of heart attack.
Their research, led by Dr. Bruce Liang, director of the Pat and Jim Calhoun Cardiology Center, is published in the Jan. 11 issue of the Journal of the American College of Cardiology. It found heart attack patients had elevated levels of the protein fragment known as Caspase-3 p17 in their blood.
"We've discovered a new biomarker for heart attack, and showed that apoptosis, or a particular kind of cell death, ...
2011-01-06
Cancer cells reproduce by dividing in two, but a molecule known as PML limits how many times this can happen, according to researchers lead by Dr. Gerardo Ferbeyre of the University of Montreal's Department of Biochemistry. The team proved that malignant cancers have problems with this molecule, meaning that in its absence they can continue to grow and eventually spread to other organs. Importantly, the presence of PML molecules can easily be detected, and could serve to diagnose whether a tumor is malignant or not.
"We discovered that benign cancer cells produce the ...
2011-01-06
St. Louis, MO, January 6, 2011 – Thanks to the Let's Move initiative, society is becoming more aware of alarming statistics like 1 in 4 children are obese and childhood obesity has nearly doubled over the past two decades! With this platform, nutrition education and physical activity in the classroom have taken the forefront against this growing epidemic. A study in the January/February 2011 issue of the Journal of Nutrition Education and Behavior explores twenty-six school-based nutrition interventions in the United States.
Investigators performed a content analysis ...
2011-01-06
News Body (Max 2800 characters)
Stuttgart, Germany — According to InfoCom most recent release of the Quarterly TV Monitoring, the top-10 largest groups, at World level, collectively posted 145m paid-for* TV subscriptions, 54% of which attributed to satellite TV (2Q10). The top-10 ranking is lead by US-based satellite TV player, DirecTV, with 25m subscriptions, of which 25% from its Latin American subsidiaries (Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Mexico, Puerto Rico and Venezuela). DISH Network, another US-based satellite TV player, is ranked 4th, with 14.3m subscriptions, ...
2011-01-06
UAE Exchange, the leading global remittance and foreign exchange brand, today opened its new spacious and more convenient premises in Musaffah Sector 10, in a move to enhance the service and value proposition of the brand to its loyal customers in and around Mussaffah. The branch was inaugurated by H. E. Abdulla Humaid Ali Al Mazroei, Chairman, and Dr. B. R. Shetty, MD & CEO, UAE Exchange in the presence of Mr. Sudhir Kumar Shetty, COO - Global Operations, other senior officials of UAE Exchange, special invitees and the Press fraternity.
The new branch is located in ...
2011-01-06
National Office Systems-SYSTEMATICS, http://www.systematics.biz and http://www.nosinc.com, one of the nation's leading providers of storage and information management systems, expands its presence in the Northeast today with the acquisition of East Coast Storage Solutions of Berlin, CT.
The acquisition was announced jointly this morning at SYSTEMATICS' headquarters in Westborough, MA and National Office Systems' headquarters in Gaithersburg, MD. Terms of the transaction were not disclosed. Bradford Ostiguy, President of East Coast Storage Systems, and staff will continue ...
2011-01-06
There are more people in the United States that can read and don't than those who are illiterate (To Read or Not To Read- National Endowment for the Arts, 2007). Why?
Fact: Less than 1/3 of 13 year olds are daily readers (National Endowment for the Arts, 7). 52% of Americans ages 18-24 reported reading books for pleasure in a 2002 study. This was a 12% decline from 1992. However, this is not a young American isolated age group of non-readers. This decline was consistent within the 25-34 at 8% and 34-44 age brackets at 11% too. Why?
There is less of a focus now than ...
2011-01-06
Imagine the luxurious service standard and amenities of the world's most famous train, the Venice Simplon-Orient-Express, arriving on the banks of the most pristine, free-flowing river system in the Lower 48. Far and Away Adventures (http://www.far-away.com/) has.
For this flight of fancy on Idaho's Middle Fork of the Salmon River, instead of debarking from a train guests pull to shore in rafts. Here, instead of porters, adventure guides set up and break down five-star camps and serve locally sourced, organically raised Kobe Wagyu Beef on pre-heated stoneware while pouring ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
[Press-News.org] Mayo Clinic determines lifetime risk of adult rheumatoid arthritis