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In this video, I show how to determine the difference between Dequevain’s Stenosing Tenosynovitis and Carpo-metacarpal Arthritis. This is important to note especially if you are considering having your patient injected. Feel free to like and SUBSCRIBE to our channel and head over to our website http://orthoevalpal.com/ and see what more we have to offer. Enjoy!!
What causes an increase in joint pain? Can endometriosis make things worse for those with fibromyalgia, lupus, osteoporosis, rheumatoid arthritis, Ehlers-Danlos syndrome?
Does endometriosis have a habit of troubling bone health and causing joint pain more than normal? I’ve always believed a lot of additional medical issues are not spoken of in women who have endometriosis, PCOS and adenomyosis type conditions. I decided to do some research on the connect between bone health and endometriosis here’s how it went…
Please remember that I am not a medical professional. I am a patient and have created this channel to share my experiences. This is all purely informative and in no way am I providing medical advice, so please consult a medical professional.
Time Stamp:
What Causes Joint Pain? Can Endometriosis trouble Fibromyalgia, Lupus, Osteoporosis, Arthritis, EDS..?
00:12 – Disclaimer
00:40 – Osteoporosis & Endometriosis
02:26 – Rheumatoid Arthritis & Endometriosis
03:44 – Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome & Endometriosis
04:41 – Lupus & Endometriosis
06:04 – Fibromyalgia & Endometriosis
07:06 – Can Endometriosis Cause Joint Pains?
08:03 – How can joint pain be improved if you have endometriosis and or EDS?
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Original article to this video:
Can Endometriosis Cause Joint Pain?https://allthingsendometriosis.com/endometriosis-cause-joint-pain/
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Follow me on Social Media (and check out my website & podcast too!):
My Diet for Endometriosis & Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome:
https://allthingsendometriosis.com/my-diet-for-endometriosis-ehlers-danlos-syndrome/
Video: https://youtu.be/QqHHYUyngns
My Experience: Using Kinesiology Taping for Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome (with video):
https://allthingsendometriosis.com/using-kinesiology-taping-ehlers-danlos-syndrome/
Video: https://youtu.be/v0kX4MwdCvs
Endometriosis and Adenomyosis Natural Pain Relief – My Journey:
https://allthingsendometriosis.com/endometriosis-and-adenomyosis-natural-pain-relief-my-journey/
Video: https://youtu.be/S8WbxjuGIiQ
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External Links Mentioned in the Video:
4. Fibromyalgia – Mayo Clinic:
https://www.mayoclinic.org/diseases-conditions/fibromyalgia/symptoms-causes/syc-20354780
5. National Institute of Health:
https://www.nichd.nih.gov/newsroom/releases/endometriosis
Disclaimer: I am not a medical professional. I am a patient and have created this platform to share my experiences. This is all purely informative and in no way am I providing medical advice. Please consult a medical professional.
In this video, Knee Arthritis- 5 Most Common Signs You Have It I show you a patient who has the most common signs of knee arthritis.
✅Bowing of the legs
✅Medial (inner) knee pain
✅Effusion (swelling in the joint)
✅Lack of extension (straightening) and flexion (bending)
✅Loss of knee definition
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How does arthritis affect your joints? How does joint replacement work? What is recovery like after a joint replacement? Antonia Chen, M.D., M.B.A, Orthopaedic Surgeon and Director of Research, Arthroplasty Services at Brigham and Women’s Hospital, and Associate Professor of Orthopaedic Surgery at Harvard Medical School discusses the most common joint replacements and the best things people can do to help them return to the activities of daily life after surgery.
Preparing for Joint Replacement Surgery: https://hipknee.aahks.org/preparing-for-joint-replacement-surgery-at-home-exercises/
Hip Conditioning Program: https://orthoinfo.aaos.org/en/recovery/hip-conditioning-program/
Knee Exercises: https://orthoinfo.aaos.org/en/staying-healthy/knee-exercises/”
0:00 – Intro
0:27 – Conditions That Affect Your Joints
0:35 – Example of Arthritis in Knee
0:59 – Example of Arthritis in Hip
1:29 – Ways to Treat Joint Pain
3:07 – Most Common Joint Replacement Procedures
4:14 – Recovery After Surgery
About Mass General Brigham:
Mass General Brigham combines the strength of two world-class academic medical centers, five nationally ranked specialty hospitals, 11 community hospitals, and dozens of health centers. Our doctors and researchers accelerate medical breakthroughs and drive innovations in patient care. They are leaders in medical education, serving as Harvard Medical School faculty and training the next generation of physicians. Mass General Brigham’s mission is to deliver the best, affordable health care to patients everywhere. Together, we transform the health of our communities and beyond.
#Arthritis #JointPain #MassGeneralBrigham #MGB
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Arthritis Symptoms, Joint Replacement, and Surgical Recovery Explained | Mass General Brigham
Seeking relief from chronic joint pain and rheumatoid arthritis, Barbara Young turned to Sarasota Memorial orthopedic surgeon Edward Stolarski, MD, who specializes in hip and knee replacement and reconstruction surgeries. Barbara shares her story and how choosing the right orthopedic specialist put an end to decades of pain. Video Rating: / 5
De scheidsrechter greep bij de Grand Slam of Darts in toen het publiek Berry van Peer uitjoelde. Bray nam de Nederlander in bescherming. Tijdens het WK blikt hij met ons terug op dat moment! Video Rating: / 5
Former quality player takes tips to get better. …..this is the results lol
This video “Juvenile Idiopathic Arthritis (Part 1)” is part of the Lecturio course “Pediatrics” ► WATCH the complete course on http://lectur.io/jia1
► LEARN ABOUT:
– Juvenile idiopathic arthritis – a case study
– Pathology of JIA
– Several very different types of JIA
– JIA characteristics
– Progression of symptoms
– Types of JIA
– Chronic destruction of knee joints
– Historical findings
► THE PROF:
Your tutor is Brian Alverson, MD. He is the Director for the Division of Pediatric Hospital Medicine at Hasbro Children’s Hospital and Associate Professor of Pediatrics at Brown University in Providence, RI. He has been active in pediatric education and research for 15 years and has won over 25 teaching awards at two Ivy League Medical Schools. Dr. Alverson has extensive experience in preparing students for the USMLE exams and has test writing experience as well.
► LECTURIO is your single-point resource for medical school:
Study for your classes, USMLE Step 1, USMLE Step 2, MCAT or MBBS with video lectures by world-class professors, recall & USMLE-style questions and textbook articles. Create your free account now: http://lectur.io/jia1
Get to know the science behind what causes the stiff, creaky joints of the most common forms of arthritis and what you can do to prevent it.
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The bad backs, elbow pain, and creaky knees so common in older people often aren’t just “old age.” In fact, the source of this stiffness plagues many young people as well. The culprit is arthritis: a condition that affects over 90 million people in the U.S. alone. What makes arthritis so pervasive, and why haven’t we found a cure for it? Kaitlyn Sadtler and Heather J. Faust investigate.
Lesson by Kaitlyn Sadtler and Heather J. Faust, directed by CUB Animation.
Animator’s website: https://www.cubanimation.com
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View full lesson: https://ed.ted.com/lessons/why-haven-t-we-cured-arthritis-kaitlyn-sadtler-and-heather-j-faust
Thank you so much to our patrons for your support! Without you this video would not be possible! Kiara Taylor, Louisa Lee, eden sher, Vignan Velivela, Sage Curie, Srikote Naewchampa, Tejas Dc, Khalifa Alhulail, Faiza Imtiaz, Martin Stephen, Jerome Froelich, Dan Paterniti, Jose Henrique Leopoldo e Silva, Mullaiarasu Sundaramurthy, Elnathan Joshua Bangayan, Caleb ross, Duo Xu, Quinn Shen, Marvin Vizuett, Sid, Marylise CHAUFFETON, Karen Goepen-Wee, Sama aafghani, Mandeep Singh, Abhijit Kiran Valluri, Morgan Williams, Kris Siverhus, Jason Weinstein, Tony Trapuzzano, Devin Harris, Brandy Jones, Shawn Quichocho, Gi Nam Lee, Joy Love Om, Miloš Stevanović, Ghassan Alhazzaa, Yankai Liu, Pavel Zalevskiy, Claudia Mayfield, Stephanie Perozo, Joe Giamartino, Filip Dabrowski, Barbara Smalley, Megan Douglas, Tim Leistikow, Andrés Melo Gámez, Renhe Ji, Ka-Hei Law, Michal Salman and Peter Liu.
Osteoarthrtitis is a condition of the skeletal system. Which affects around 10 million people in the UK. It’s a condition that causes painful inflammation and stiffness in the joints.
The most common type of arthritis is osteoarthritis, which is wear and tear of the joints. Video Rating: / 5
Here is the narration exactly as it is in the video:
Unfortunately, some genetic factors, bacterial or viral infection or smoking can induce mutation in the collagen II.
This mutation results in replacement of arginine amino acid with citrulline amino acid.
This little change has devastating lifelong sequences on the affected people.
The antigen presenting cells APCs such as dendritic cells which patrol our tissues recognize this new mutated collagen.
These antigen presenting cells have specific detecting molecules on their outer cell membranes called HLA molecules.
Specific types of these HLA molecules which are HLA DR1 and HLA DR4 become confused and deal with the new collagen as foreign body.
“phagocyte them now, phagocyte them now”
As a result, the antigen presenting cells phagocyte this mutated collagen.
After digesting the citrullinated collagens the APCs present some parts of the protein on their outer surface as foreign bodies
On the other hand, T helper cells in our body work as security detectors who search all antigen presenting cells for any suspicious foreign molecules.
Once T helper CD4+ cells meet HLA molecules connected to citrullinated collagen they become activated.
This activation results in production and release of cytokines IL-2 which have autocrine effects as they come back to bind and activate their releasing T helper cells.
IL-2 induces T helper cell proliferation into 2 new cellular lines, T helper 1 abbreviated as Th1 and T helper 2 cells abbreviated as Th2.
The Th2 stimulate the production of various antibodies
whereas Th1 are directed toward cell mediated immunity and later production of interferon gamma and IL-17.
Now we will focus on antibody production
Once Th2 binds to B cell it activates it.
This activation results in sequence of B cell proliferations ended up with 2 new cell lines, Plasma cells and memory cells.
Plasma cells produce various types of antibodies.
Whereas memory cells keep records of all foreign antigens in our bodies and provide long lasting immunological memory.
Now we will focus on the antibodies
The first type of antibodies are the IgG antibodies with attack the cyclic citrullinated peptides abbreviated as CCP.
The anti CCP antibodies are specific markers for diagnosis of rheumatoid arthritis.
The second type of antibodies are the IgM antibodies which attack our IgG antibodies.
So, they are antibodies against our antibodies.
They are called rheumatoid factor and they are very common in the serum of patients with rheumatoid arthritis.
Now both types of antibodies travel through blood to the joints, and even to other tissues.
Remember rheumatoid arthritis is joint disease with systematic manifestations.
Now let’s focus on joints, where antibody complexes accumulation activates phagocytes and complement system.
The activated phagocytes will release inflammatory cytokines such as TNF alpha which play important role in mediating the inflammatory damage to the joints.
They also secrete IL-1, IL-6.
We have also IL-17 and interferon gamma produced by T cells.
Additionally, complement enzymes activate the neutrophils in the joint synovial fluids.
Cytokines stimulate synovial membrane proliferation and swelling which is a remarkable pathological sign of rheumatoid arthritis.
Additionally, they activate osteoclast cells which induce bone erosions.
Angiogenesis also stimulated by cytokines.
Together cytokines released by activated macrophages and activated neutrophils induce the production of protease and collagenase enzymes which progressively erode and destroy the cartilage layer of the joints.
Happy reading (or enjoy your reading, it is up to you Carla)
Narration reading Carla Tordoff Gibson
Pharmacology and Therapeutic department
Kings College London KCL University
In this episode, Jane Buckner discusses how citrullinated tenascin-C is an autoantigen that is targeted by autoreactive CD4+ T cells and autoantibodies in patients with rheumatoid arthritis. Video Rating: / 5
Rheumatoid arthritis is an inflammatory disease that mainly affects the joints in which the body’s immune system attacks its own tissues. This animation produced by Nature Reviews Immunology and Nature Reviews Rheumatology guides us through the immune pathways involved in the disease, from the first signs of self-reactive immune cells to joint damage and other symptoms, and highlights opportunities for new treatments.
Nature Reviews Immunology (http://www.nature.com/nri) and Nature Reviews Rheumatology (http://www.nature.com/nrrheum) have full responsibility for all editorial content. This content is editorially independent of sponsors.