- Still's disease
Infobox_Disease
Name = Stills disease
Caption =
DiseasesDB = 34295
DiseasesDB_mult = DiseasesDB2|12430 | ICD10 = ICD10|M|06|1|m|05, ICD10|M|08|2|m|05
ICD9 = ICD9|714.30
ICDO =
OMIM =
MedlinePlus =
eMedicineSubj =
eMedicineTopic =
MeshID =Still's disease is a form of
juvenile idiopathic arthritis , characterized by high spikingfever s and transientrash es, named after the Englishphysician Sir George Frederic Still (1861 -1941 ). The disease was first discovered inchild ren, but now it is also known to occur, less commonly, in adults in whom it is referred to as adult-onset Still's disease (AOSD) described by another English physician, Bywaters in 1971 (the same author is famous for the crush syndrome). The Irish writerWilliam Wall is a well-known sufferer of the disease.There are several theories about the cause of Still's disease. It has been suggested it may be caused by a microbacterial
infection . However, the cause of Still's disease remains unknown. The pathogenesis of the disease is more likely to be autoimmune.ymptoms
Patients with Still's disease usually have systemic
symptom s. Usual symptoms include:
* Waves of highfevers that rise to 40 °C (104 °F) which may be accompanied by extreme fatigue
* A faint transient non-itching salmon-coloredskin rash can also be observed
* Flu-likepain throughout the body
*Muscle pain
* Severe joint pain and joint damageDiagnosis
Because the disease presents in many different ways, diagnosis is difficult. It is often a laborious process consisting of the elimination of other diseases. It is diagnosed on a basis of clinical features of the illness, with the results of a number of common tests combined. Persistent arthritis (lasting at least 6 weeks) is frequently a symptom. A rash is frequently visible on the body, and the patients usually suffer from high, spiking fevers. Blood tests frequently indicate elevated white blood cell counts, suggesting there is serious inflammation. Also, low red blood cell counts (
anemia ) are common. Typically, elevated blood tests indicate in high sedimentation rates, an indicator of inflammation. Other indicators of inflammation may also be elevated, includingCRP (c-reactive protein) andferritin levels. However, the classic blood tests forrheumatoid arthritis and systemiclupus erythematosus are usually negative.A new important marker of AOSD is the glycosylated ferritin: the percentage of this form of the protein is often below the 50% of the total during the flare of the disease and often during the remission phases.Prognosis
The fever and most of the other symptoms tend to run their course within several months. However, the arthritis can become a long-term problem as a
chronic illness persisting intoadulthood . In addition, since the disease can present as anacute illness in adulthood, many adult patients withchronic illness from Still's Disease never show signs or symptoms of the disease in childhood, but both initially present with the disease in adulthood and may have persistence of all symptoms through some period of adulthood. The fever and systemic symptoms in these patients may go in remission, leaving arthritis symptoms. Conversely, allsigns andsymptoms , including arthritis and systemicsigns andsymptoms , may either remit completely during adulthood, present intermittently in a "flare" type pattern or, less commonly, continue indefinitely during adulthood.External links
* [http://www.stillsdisease.org/ AOSD Web site]
* [http://www.arthritis.org Arthritis.org]
* [http://www.nolaflash.com/cgi-bin/yabb/YaBB.pl Adult Onset Still's Disease Discussion Board]
* [http://disc.server.com/Indices/148599.html The AOSD Message Board]
* [http://www.medicinenet.com/stills_disease/article.htm Still's disease at medicinenet.com]
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