Potential biomarker for lung disease in scleroderma patients discovered aninews.in - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from aninews.in Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Potential biomarker found for lung disease in scleroderma patients
The finding will indicate how aggressively physicians should treat patients with the associated condition.
Researchers have discovered a protein that may predict disease severity for a lung condition that often proves fatal to patients with scleroderma.
The recent study, published in
“Despite interstitial lung disease being the leading cause of death among scleroderma patients, there are very few markers that predict progression of the disease,” said John Varga, M.D., a corresponding author of the paper, chief of the Michigan Medicine Division of Rheumatology and associate director of the U-M Scleroderma Program. “CTRP9 is an entirely novel biomarker that has never been implicated in scleroderma. It will help physicians predict the course of the disease and identify those patients who would not need to be on aggressive treatment for their lung disease.”
Researchers discover potential biomarker for lung disease in scleroderma patients news-medical.net - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from news-medical.net Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Plantation PD Needs Help Finding 87-Year-Old John Varga
CBS Miami 6 hrs ago Syndicated Local – CBS Miami
PLANTATION (CBSMiami) – The Plantation Police Department is asking for the public’s help locating 87-year-old John Varga.
Varga was last seen Tuesday at around 3:46 p.m. in the 13500 block of NW 7 Street. He was driving a silver 2018 Subaru with Florida tag “Z77CNE.”
Police said Varga has an altered mental status, which is why he’s considered endangered.
Varga stands 5-feet 7-inches tall and weighs about 170 pounds. He has brown eyes and short gray hair.
It’s not known what he was wearing or where he was going.
Online mental health intervention improves anxiety in isolated scleroderma patients during the pandemic
People with a rare autoimmune disease, who likely experience more serious isolation during a global pandemic, saw their anxiety and depression improve after receiving online mental health intervention through an international study involving investigators from Michigan Medicine.
The paper, published in the
Lancet Rheumatology, analyzed the mental health progress of over 150 people with scleroderma, a disease that causes tightening of the skin and connective tissues. Researchers randomized patients to either receive video support intervention or be put on a waitlist, finding mental health outcomes improved after the program finished.