Rheumatoid Arthritis (RA) is the most common form of autoimmune arthritis. It is a chronic disease that causes pain, stiffness, swelling and limited motion most often in the small joints of the hands and feet. Inflammation from the disease can affect other organs in the body as it progresses including: skin, eyes, lungs, heart, kidneys, salivary glands, nerve tissue, bone marrow, blood vessels.
Lumps that grow beneath the skin (rheumatoid nodules) often found on elbows and hands.
RA is an autoimmune disease, which means immune cells in the body do not function properly and attack the body causing damage to healthy tissue, in this case the joints. This then causes inflammation in the synovium, the tissue that lines the joints. The attacking immune cells also release chemicals that cause more inflammation damaging the cartilage that cushions bone.
Women are more likely than men to develop the disease. RA can occur at any age, most commonly starting between 40-60. Family history may predispose you to getting RA. People who smoke, have been exposed to asbestos or silica, and who are obese have a higher risk of developing the disease.
Long term prognosis is variable for patients. A more favorable disease outcome occurs if they present early in the course of disease and are treated with DMARDS. The outcome is mainly dependent upon the degree of disease activity, joint damage, physical functional status of the patient, psychological health, and presence of other illness.
An adverse prognosis is present in those who have functional limitation, extra articular disease, rheumatoid factor positivity or presence of anti-CCP antibodies.
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