|
|
Home
Community
Newsletter
Vol 5 Issue 172
Arthritis Insight
Newsletter * Vol. 5 Issue 172 November 12, 2003
----------------------------------
Welcome to the 172nd issue of the Arthritis Insight Newsletter.
All back issues will be posted at community/newsletter
Feel free to pass this newsletter around to others who may be
interested.
----------------------------------
The information in this newsletter should not take the place of
advice and guidance from your own health-care providers. Material
in this newsletter is provided for educational and informational
purposes only. Be sure to check with your doctor before making
any changes in your treatment plan. Information presented here is
the opinion of the authors and has not necessarily been approved
or endorsed by the medical advisors.
----------------------------------
Notes From Tina
(Tina@arthritisinsight.com)
Tina Underwood aka KrissyJo
The mail monster did it again! The ol' meanie ate our mail. If
you sent us email over the weekend, you might want to resend it!
Tina's dealing with family issues this week. If everyone could
send good thoughts for her daughter and nephew to get better it
would be appreciated.
Not much going on this week. Started work on the website for the
next Gimpfest. We're going to Boston in the spring. If you've
never been to a Gimpfest you've gotta try it. Once you do you'll
want to go to all of them. Should have more information for
everybody next week.
-Kimmy
----------------------------------
Ron's Ramblin's
(Ron@arthritisinsight.com)
Ron Griffin aka IndyRon
Well, it is November and this is Indiana. I am not sure why, but
with November come the gray skies which seem to last from now
until May. While this is not always the best weather for my mood,
I have discovered a sure fire way to lift my spirits. There is
nothing like a nice cozy fire and a good book to lift me from the
doldrums. I guess a bit of escapism is good for all of us when
the old depression bug hits.
It has come to my attention that there has been quite a bit of
dissention and disagreement concerning various ideas and
statements posted on the AI message boards. I would point out
that while we may not all agree with what is said on the boards
that they would be a pretty dull place if there were nothing but
agreement. It is important though, to keep in mind that there are
ways to disagree that do not involve personal attacks. I would
hope that we can all adopt a standard of TOLERANCE that will
allow for the healthy discussion of ideas which might disagree
with ours. If we can all view the boards as a place where we can
all float ideas and explore even unpopular topics while remaining
supportive of each other and of our rights to challenge even
established ideas, then we will all benefit.
Remember, just because I may disagree with you, it doesn t
mean that I am attacking you or belittling your thoughts.
Diversity in ideas has always been a mainstay of these boards and
should continue to be. Lets not let a bit of divergent thought
break apart what we have all worked so hard to build.
~Ron
----------------------------------
Your Weekly Giggle
Headstones
Harry Edsel Smith of Albany, New York:
Born 1903-Died 1942
Looked up the elevator shaft to see if the car was on the way
down.
It was.
In a Thurmont, Maryland, cemetery:
Here lies an Atheist
All dressed up
And no place to go.
In a London, England cemetery:
Here lies Ann Mann,
Who lived an old maid
But died an old Mann.
In a Ribbesford, England, cemetery:
Anna Wallace:
The children of Israel wanted bread,
And the Lord sent them manna.
Old clerk Wallace wanted a wife,
And the Devil sent him Anna.
In a Ruidoso, New Mexico, cemetery:
Here lies Johnny Yeast.
Pardon me For not rising.
In a Uniontown, Pennsylvania, cemetery:
Here lies the body of Jonathan Blake.
Stepped on the gas
Instead of the brake.
In a Silver City, Nevada, cemetery:
Here lays The Kid.
We planted him raw.
He was quick on the trigger
But slow on the draw.
A lawyer's epitaph in England:
Sir John Strange.
Here lies an honest lawyer,
And that is Strange.
John Penny's epitaph in the Wimborne, England, cemetery:
Reader, if cash thou art
In want of any,
Dig 6 feet deep;
And thou wilt find a Penny.
In a cemetery in Hartscombe, England:
On the 22nd of June,
Jonathan Fiddle Went out of tune.
On a grave from the 1880s in Nantucket, Massachusetts:
Under the sod and under the trees,
Lies the body of Jonathan Pease.
He is not here, there's only the pod.
Pease shelled out and went to God.
In a cemetery in England:
Remember man, as you walk by,
As you are now, so once was I.
As I am now, you soon will be.
Prepare yourself and follow me.
To which someone replied by writing on the tombstone:
To follow you I'll not consent
Until I know which way you went
Last add, from Boot Hill, in Tombstone, Arizona:
Here lies Lester Moore
One slug from a 44
No Les
No More
Check out all the jokes at:
fun/jokes
Send yours in today!
----------------------------------
Tina's Tips
Tina@arthritisinsight.com
Arthritis can affect your ability to do even the simplest of
tasks. I've heard some people say, "Accept your
limitations." I'm not sure accepting them is the way to go.
I prefer to challenge those limitations, work around them,
finding alternate ways of achieving the same goal. Every week
I'll share some tips I've found to work around those annoying
limitations and I hope all of you will send in your tips too. We
may not be the next Martha Stewart, but sometimes the simplest
things can help so much.
A great one from Virginia:
If you have trouble gripping a regular toothbrush, try an
electric
one. The larger base makes it easier to hold with almost no
pressure
needed. Just guide the rotating brush around your teeth. You'll
get a
much better cleaning job in the bargain.
Check out more tips at living/tips.html and send in yours today to Tina@arthritisinsight.com Keep those tips coming!
----------------------------------
What s New
Our Pets
Read about Tina's dog Maddy and Brianna's cat Herbie in
therapeutic pets.
living/pets/therapeutic.html
Photo Album
Meet the Message Board Posters! Added Beannie :)
community/photo
Birthday Board
Added three more - when's yours?
community/birthday
Question of the Week
Fuzzy slippers and comfy jammys! What else gives you comfort when
times are tough?
community/question
Photo Album
Meet the Message Board Posters!
community/question
Member Stories
Busy day! Margaret shares her story, Gill updates the Kineret
Journal and Brianna's mom shares the story of young Brianna's
bilateral hip replacements.
community/question
Newsletter
This week's newsletter is up and ready!
community/newsletter
News
As always, Karen has brought you all the latest news you need to
be on top of your arthritis and general health.
news
Newly Diagnosed
New to the arthritis game and feeling a little lost? Our web
links in the Newly Diagnosed section have been updated to help
you find even more answers to your questions.
medical/new/
Message Boards
Got a question about the message board or the website? You can
ask it in this thread, and find the answers to the top three
questions we get from our members about the boards.
cgi-bin/wsmbb/wsmbb.cgi?RT+KYWRJLLXVS/AKFCLKZQUN+11622+0+config+1898.11622
Check out all the latest updates at
updates.html
----------------------------------
Arthritis Insight Chat
community/chat
Time to get the party started! Got some extra time? Can't sleep?
Drop into the chatroom to talk to other members that know exactly
what you're going through.
----------------------------------
Cooking with Char
Char LeFleur
char@arthritisinsight.com
Hello friends. This weeks column is going to be short and sweet,
with a minimum of chit chat. My shoulders, elbows and wrists are
flaring, and despite a pred taper and an injected elbow, typing
is an adventure in pain this week.
A regular reader named Elena is the author of this weeks recipes.
Thank you Elena, you have saved my aching arms this week.
Mom's Apple Salad
Cut and dice 2-3 apples depends on how many you are serving-Red
delicious
works best or choose your own
1 cup of raisins
1/2 cup chopped celery
1/2 cup chopped walnuts
1-1/2 Cup Miracle Whip-low fat or regular
Mix all ingredients together in a bowl.
Refrigerate 1 hour
Serve as dessert, snack or side dish.
Serves 4
NOTE: I eat this a lot and I find it to be really good for nausea
from my
meds and when I need a mood lift. If you are unable to cut the
celery, walnuts, apples-have someone do that for you! Some stores
may have ingredients already cut up. I love this recipe! I eat it
a lot-good vitamins here!
Easy Fruit Salad-Really easy
2 cans fruit cocktail
1 can tropical fruit mix
Maraschino Cherries- as many as you want
1/2 bag mini marshmallows
2-3 bananas cut up
1/4 cup coconut- Optional
Place ingredients in plastic container with lid
Shake
Let sit in fridge for one hour
Serves 2-3 people
You can adjust this for the amount of people served
NOTE: This makes a great quick dessert. My husband loves this
recipe!
If you have questions, comments, or suggestions, or have recipes
that you would like to share, please send them to Char@arthritisinsight.com.
----------------------------------
From the NIH:
Autoantibodies Precede Disease in Lupus Patients
http://www.nih.gov/news/pr/nov2003/niams-05.htm
A new study funded largely by the National Institute of Arthritis
and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases (NIAMS) reveals that people
diagnosed with systemic lupus erythematosus (lupus) - an
autoimmune disease in which the body attacks its own tissues -
have autoantibodies in their blood years before the symptoms of
lupus appear. The early detection of autoantibodies - proteins
that attach to the body's healthy tissues by mistake - may help
in recognizing those who will develop the disease and allow
physicians to monitor them before they might otherwise be
noticed.
Senior author John Harley, M.D., Ph.D., of the Oklahoma Medical
Research Foundation and the University of Oklahoma, and his
colleagues there and in other institutions, tested blood from 130
U.S. armed forces servicemen and women, without knowing their
identities, who were once healthy but later developed lupus.
Using many years of previously collected samples from the
Department of Defense Serum Repository, the researchers compared
samples from the lupus patients to samples from those who never
developed lupus. When testing early samples from both groups,
they found that those with lupus had the autoantibodies in their
blood for months to years before symptoms appeared. Some of the
autoantibodies, such as antinuclear antibody, had been present
longer than others. The lupus autoantibodies, say the authors,
tend to accumulate in the blood in a predictable pattern up until
diagnosis, when the rate of new autoantibodies slows.
"We don't know whether the virtual halt in the accumulation
of new autoantibodies is a result of therapy now typically used
or whether the relative stability in the autoantibodies found
after diagnosis is a feature of the natural history of
lupus," said Dr. Harley. "Certainly, this observation
reminds us of how important diagnosis is for what subsequently
happens in the immune system of the patient."
NIAMS Director Stephen I. Katz, M.D., Ph.D., said
"Identifying such patterns in disease progression may lead
researchers to understand what causes autoantibodies to appear
when they do and how they contribute to the disease." NIAMS
researcher Gregory Dennis, M.D., a coauthor of the study, said,
"Lupus and other autoimmune diseases often go untreated for
years and are diagnosed only after damage to the body tissues has
occurred. Findings such as these, which will help us identify and
monitor people who may develop these diseases, are extremely
valuable."
Lupus can affect many parts of the body, including the joints,
skin, kidneys, heart, lungs, blood vessels and brain. People who
have lupus may have many different symptoms, but some of the most
common ones include extreme fatigue, painful or swollen joints
(arthritis), unexplained fever, skin rashes and kidney problems.
Many more women than men have lupus. It is three times more
common in African American women than in Caucasian women and is
also more common in women of Hispanic, Asian and Native American
descent.
Other institutions taking part in the study included NIAMS, the
Department of Veterans Affairs, Walter Reed Army Medical Center
and the U.S. Army Center for Health Promotion and Preventive
Medicine. Funding was also provided by the National Institute of
Allergy and Infectious Diseases and the National Center for
Research Resources, both part of the Department of Health and
Human Services' National Institutes of Health
----------------------------------
Member Stories
Margaret's Story
Hi there.
My name is margaret. I am 52 and this past three years have been
one new experience after another. I was used to ten hours at
least on my feet taking caring of my world for a lot of years.
Then things changed. I started having cellulites in one leg every
five or six weeks and I found out the hard way about lyphedema. I
know have it in both legs. I then started having pain in my knee
and found out that my knee and hip are gone due to
osteoarthritis.
The question of the day is this; how does one lose the weight
needed before surgery when you can't walk except in the house and
that has its limits.?
I am on three different pain meds and sometimes that does not
even work.
But I chose not to stay in the mud puddle I am in. I am going to
school for computers. I am currently trying to get a scooter and
help in the house.
I try to find something each day that makes me laugh and that is
helping.
To see the rest of stories go on over to:
community/stories
----------------------------------
Notes and Insights:
Birthday Board!
Happy Birthday to Loretta, Kathy T., Elda Boensch, Tammy aka
Bandit, Karen Sears aka KaeKae, Angela M., Stacey L. and Lucy!!!
Check out all the birthdays at
community/birthday
and make sure to send them an arthritis-friendly e-card:
cgi-bin/postcards/postcard.pl
Join the Arthritis Dieters!
This is a group of people with arthritis who want to lose weight
with others who know of the challenges of living with is
arthritis. All those medications that make living with arthritis
tolerable, but pile on the pounds. This group has been set up to
give us a protected group where we can talk to others who know
what it is like.
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/arthritis-dieters/
Wanna help?
Having surgery? Starting a new drug or treatment? Filing for
disability? Keep an Arthritis Insight journal so all of our
members can share and learn from your experience. If you want to
keep a journal just let us know.
Write an article!
We always need articles on all subjects relating to arthritis.
C'mon folks, we can't do this without you.
Ken Akers Cheer Fund
Donations to the Ken Akers Cheer Fund will be used to send
flowers and gifts to those community members who are
hospitalized, flaring or just in need of some good cheer.
community/kenscheerfund
Thank You!
A great big thank you to NeedaBasket.com (http://needabasket.com). NeedaBasket is now Arthritis Insight's
official gift basket company. They are giving us a great discount
and are donating baskets for our Arthritis Warriors.
Special Offers for Arthritis Insight Members
Whenever possible we will try get to our sponsors to agree to
discounts and the like for our members. Here are our current
special offers:
Sore No More (http://sorenomore.com) gel will send a free sample of the pain
relieving gel to any Arthritis Insight Community Member who
emails them at dma@glogerm.com.
----------------------------------
Weekly News Summary
Karen Sears
kaekae@arthritisinsight.com
WORKERS IN PAIN COST BUSINESS BILLIONS
-STUDY
Not today, boss. I've got a headache. One in eight workers is in
pain and losing productive time at work, costing U.S. business an
estimated $61.2 billion each year. Headache was the most common
pain, followed by back pain and arthritis.
Yahoo News, Nov 11
DEPRESSION TREATMENT EASES ARTHRITIS
-STUDY
Treating elderly patients for depression can help ease arthritis
pain, an unexpected and hopeful finding for sufferers of the
degenerative joint disease, the author of a study released on
Tuesday said.
Yahoo News, Nov 11
THERAPEUTIC VALUE OF FLUDARABINE
TREATMENT LIMITED IN PATIENTS WITH PSORIATIC ARTHRITIS
Significant peripheral lymphopaenia is observed with fludarabine
treatment; however, only modest synovial lymphopaenia and
clinical improvement occur with treatment, according to a recent
American study.
Doctor s Guide, Nov 11 (free registration required)
ESTROGEN DEFICIENCY MAY BE LINKED TO
INCREASED RISK OF OSTEOARTHRITIS
Oestrogen deficiency may be associated with an increased risk of
osteoarthritis (OA), according to the findings of a large Italian
survey of menopausal women.
Doctor s Guide, Nov 11 (free registration required)
PULSED SHORT WAVE DIATHERMY TREATMENT OF
KNEE OSTEOARTHRITIS SIMILARLY EFFECTIVE USING DIFFERENT
PARAMETERS
Pulsed short wave diathermy (PSWD) using different parameters
provides considerable pain relief for patients with
osteoarthritis (OA), with no statistically significant
differences observed between parameters, according to a new
study.
Doctor s Guide, Nov 11 (free registration required)
TUMOUR NECROSIS FACTOR ALPHA ANTAGONISTS
PROMISING TREATMENT FOR RHEUMATOID
ARTHRITIS IN HEPATITIS C-INFECTED PATIENTS
Treatment with tumour necrosis factor alpha (TNF alpha)
antagonists resulted in unchanged liver-related blood tests and
hepatitis C viral loads in patients with rheumatoid arthritis and
hepatitis C viral infection, report researchers from the United
States.
Doctor s Guide, Nov 11 (free registration required)
GENETIC VARIATION IN RUNX1 BINDING SITES
LINKED TO PSORIASIS, RHEUMATOID ARTHRITIS
Genetic polymorphisms in transporter proteins that affect
runt-related transcription factor (RUNX1) binding are associated
with susceptibility to psoriasis and to rheumatoid arthritis, two
research teams report in the December issue of Nature Genetics,
published online November 9.
Medscape, Nov 10 (free registration required)
STUDY: LOW-DOSE PAINKILLERS EASY ON THE
STOMACH
For most people, taking relatively low doses of aspirin,
ibuprofen, or acetaminophen such as are found in over-the-counter
products "carries little risk" of serious
gastro-intestinal damage, a new study suggests.
Yahoo News, Nov 7
GENE MODIFIED CELL THERAPY AMELIORATES
RHEUMATOID ARTHRITIS IN ANIMAL MODEL
Dendritic cells that express an apoptosis-inducing protein and
that target antigen-specific T cells inhibit the development of
disease in an animal model of rheumatoid arthritis, researchers
at the University of Alabama at Birmingham report.
Medscape, Nov 7 (free registration required)
LUMBAR INSTRUMENTATION REMOVAL RELIEVES
PAIN IN PATIENTS WITH RECURRENT LOW BACK PAIN WITHOUT
PSEUDARTHROSIS
Overall satisfaction and significant pain relief were reported
after instrumentation removal in patients with recurrent low back
pain without pseudarthrosis, particularly in those with loose
instrumentation.
Doctor s Guide, Nov 6 (free registration required)
PATIENTS TAKING CELECOXIB OR NSAIDS DO
NOT SUFFER MORE DYSPEPSIA AS THEY AGE
Researchers in the U.S. have dispelled fears that dyspepsia
symptoms increase with age in osteoarthritis patients treated
with either celecoxib or non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs
(NSAIDs).
Doctor s Guide, Nov 6 (free registration required)
More health news can be found on our site:
news/
----------------------------------
The A.I. Help Desk
Linda Peck
COMPUTERS 101
Q: I uninstalled a program, but every time I
go to the Add/Remove Programs list, it's still there. How do I
get rid of it?
A: Sometimes when you remove a program from your
computer its ghost seems determined to stay on. When that
happens, most people click the program, hit the Add / Remove
button and end up with an error. And the program is still stuck
on the list. So, is the program listing there forever? Can you
ever get rid of it? YES - but you have to play around in your
system registry.
Before we go any farther, I want to say that messing with your
registry is not for everyone and should only be attempted by
advanced users. If any of the information below doesn't make
sense to you, it's probably NOT a good idea for you to be trying
this tip. So, do this only at your own risk. If something gets
messed up, I don't wanna hear about it :-)
Also, make sure you back up your registry first. If you don't
know how, check out today's tip.
Here's the procedure:
1. Run your registry editor by hitting the Start button, Run,
Then type:
regedit
Hit Enter.
2. Your registry editor should now be up and running. Now would
be a good time to back up your registry by hitting the File menu,
Export Registry. Just in case.
3. OK, now navigate to:
HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Uninstall
4. Under this Uninstall folder, you'll see all the stuff that's
listed on the Add / Remove programs list. Find the folder for the
program that's stuck in your Add / Remove programs box,
right-click, and select Delete from the resulting menu.
Now, go back to your Control Panel, Add / Remove programs area
and you should find that extra program is now gone.
BONUS TIP
You may have already figured this out, but there's another use
for this tip. If you have a program listed in the Add / Remove
programs section that you DON'T ever want uninstalled, you can
delete its folder from the Uninstall folder list mentioned above.
That way, you (or someone else) won't accidentally remove it.
Oh, and don't worry. Deleting the folder won't remove the
program, just its entry in the Add/ Remove section of the Control
Panel.
Q: The other day, I was typing and went back
and change a thing or two. I needed to put a space between a
couple words and instead of moving the text to the right to
accommodate the space, the text was overwritten! It did this no
matter what letter I typed. I ended up having to re-type an
entire paragraph because of it. After I rebooted, the problem was
gone. Any idea why this happened?
A: Ahh, you were a victim of the Insert key!
Somehow during the course of your typing, a stray finger
accidentally tapped the Insert key. Normally, you can squeeze
words between other words with no problem. Tap that Insert key,
and you'll overwrite instead of insert. Next time that happens,
just tap the Insert key again to get back to normal.
Source: Computer Tips & Techniques
http://www.worldstart.com
Copyright 2001, Worldstart - Reprinted with permission.
THIS WEEK'S CLICKS
Medical Mysteries Solved - Do you ever wonder why it hurts so
much when you hit your funny bone? Or how thinking about yawning
triggers a yawn? - http://my.webmd.com/content/article/74/89427.htm
Create a personalized calendar for a holiday gift at Shutterfly.
I just did one and their programming is very user friendly. With
the cost of ink and calendar kits, this is a very nice
alternative - http://www.shutterfly.com
Beautiful, free Thanksgiving graphics for your personal use - http://www.patswebgraphics.com/thanksgiving/thanksgiving.html
Elf Balls from Kewlbox - I am totally hooked on this game - http://www.kewlbox.com/games/game.cfm?gameId=75 This is a free download and there are
many other free ones that you can try as well.
Some nice, free printables and computer resources - http://www.expage.com/page/allansstuff (There are some pop-ups though.)
Don't forget about MS Office clipart - they download into your MS
Clipart Library. Here's the link for Thanksgiving images - http://office.microsoft.com/clipart/results.aspx?Scope=MC&Query=Thanksgiving&CTT=6&Origin=EC010331121033
A great bargain and sale daily email, concise with no ads - sign
up at the site - http://www.mybargainbuddy.com/
Do you need to buy a holiday gift for a "David?" I have
two of them to buy for - here's a cool idea - http://www.davidscookies.com/
Until next week ~
The first step toward change is acceptance. Once you accept
yourself, you open the door to change. That's all you have to do.
Change is not something you do, it's something you allow.
----------------------------------
Contribute
Have you written something you think our subscribers would like
to read? Send it to Tina@arthritisinsight.com and maybe we'll use it in our newsletter.
----------------------------------
A Closing Thought
Moments in Life
There are moments in life when you miss someone
so much that you just want to pick them from
your dreams and hug them for real!
When the door of happiness closes, another opens;
but often times we look so long at the
closed door that we don't see the one
which has been opened for us.
Don't go for looks; they can deceive.
Don't go for wealth; even that fades away.
Go for someone who makes you smile,
because it takes only a smile to
make a dark day seem bright.
Find the one that makes your heart smile.
Dream what you want to dream;
go where you want to go;
be what you want to be,
because you have only one life
and one chance to do all the things
you want to do.
May you have enough happiness to make you sweet,
enough trials to make you strong,
enough sorrow to keep you human, and
enough hope to make you happy.
The happiest of people don't necessarily
have the best of everything;
they just make the most of
everything that comes along their way.
The brightest future will always
be based on a forgotten past;
you can't go forward in life until
you let go of your past failures and heartaches.
When you were born, you were crying
and everyone around you was smiling.
Live your life so at the end,
you're the one who is smiling and everyone
around you is crying.
Don't count the years -- count the memories...........
Life is not measured by the number of breaths we take; but by the
moments that take our breath away!
---------------------------------
If you wish to advertise in the Arthritis Insight Newsletter,
contact us at advertising@arthritisinsight.com
If you wish to unsubscribe to this newsletter, just let us know.
Arthritis Insight Newsletter Copyright 2003
|
|