Using a pedometer to measure the number of steps one takes in a day has been linked to lower fatigue in persons with rheumatoid arthritis, according to research presented this week at the American College of Rheumatology Annual Meeting in San Francisco.
Rheumatoid arthritis is the most common chronic autoimmune disease that affects the joints. RA has the potential for joint damage and deformity, with loss of function. The cause of RA is unknown. It affects people of all ages, and women more commonly than men. RA causes pain, stiffness and swelling, generally in multiple joints. RA may affect any joint, but the small joints in the hands and feet are most frequently involved. Rheumatoid inflammation may also develop in other organs such as the lungs.
Fatigue is a problem for many people with RA. And, this can often lead to them shying away from physical activity, which unfortunately contributes to a cycle of more fatigue and less physical activity. Researchers from the University of California in San Francisco recently looked at one way of breaking this cycle -- the use of pedometers.
(Score: 2) by PizzaRollPlinkett on Monday November 09 2015, @08:35PM
May help in some limited cases, but RA is a degenerative condition with deformity of the feet in many cases which inhibits walking to say the least. RA is not "arthritis" the kind that elderly people get that makes opening medicine bottles difficult. The name is misleading because osteoarthritis and RA are two very, very different conditions. RA is a crippling, degenerative disease with limited treatment options. Everyone is different, of course, and responds differently to different treatments.
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