Arthritis in Children

Posted on September 22, 2007 in latest news

Today’s lifestyle has not just made the elderly but even small children vulnerable to arthritis. Arthritis in children is referred to as juvenile arthritis. There are several different types of juvenile arthritis.

The most common form is juvenile rheumatoid arthritis (JRA), also known as juvenile idiopathic arthritis. There are several different types of JRA, which cause joint inflammation and begin before the age of 16. They are often associated with distinct symptoms and complications and may require different approaches to treatment.

Systemic onset JRA affects about 10 percent of children with arthritis. It may cause inflammation of the internal organs as well as the joints. Swelling of the joints may not be present at onset and may appear months or even years after the onset of fevers.

Symptoms

Arthritis may persist despite the fevers and other systemic symptoms going away.

Pauciarticular JRA which involves fewer than five joints, affects about half of all children with arthritis. Often only one knee is affected. It is the girls who are more at risk than boys.

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