News and Info for Lupus

What Are the Types of Lupus – What Causes Lupus?

Lupus is a very complicated disease that attacks one’s own immune system. This happens when the immune system mistakes some parts inside our body as foreign substances and therefore attacks it instead of protecting it. There are many things that one should know about this disease. These are the symptoms, diagnosis, treatment and how to stay healthy.


Joints, skin, kidney, heart, lungs, brain and blood vessels are the parts of our body that can be affected by lupus. Some of the most common symptoms of lupus are fatigue, inflammation in the joints, very high fever, red rashes and kidney problems.


There are five types of lupus, namely:


SLE or Systemic lupus erythematosus: This affects many parts of the body. The symptoms of it can be mild and severe and usually affects people within 15 to 45 years old.


Discoid lupus: This affects the skin. A person with this kind of lupus will have red and raised rashes that will occur for days or weeks at a time.


Subacute cutaneous lupus erythematosus: This lupus type causes lesions in the parts of the body that are usually under the sun. this doesn’t cause scars.


Drug-induced lupus: Side effects from medications can cause this type of lupus. Most times the lupus symptoms will go away when the patient stop taking the medicine that caused it.


Neonatal lupus: This uncommon type of lupus affects newborns of women that have SLE and other diseases.


Causes of lupus: The causes of lupus are not exactly known yet. However, it is believed to be caused by genetics, the environment and hormones. The following factors below are being studied researchers to know if these can also cause lupus:


- Sunlight


- Stress


- Particular medicines


- Viruses and other infectious agents


A person’s immune system with lupus produces auto antibodies that attack joints and body organs instead of protecting it. One of these auto antibodies is the Anti Nuclear Antibody. The causes of lupus are still largely unknown and compounding the vagueness is that each patient shows different symptoms.


The symptoms of lupus that are most common to all of the patients are arthritis, unidentified type of fever, severe fatigue, malar rash and sensitivity to sunlight. There can also be hair loss, mouth ulcers, anemia, chest pain, headaches, depression and seizures.


Body Organs that can be affected:


Kidney: Nephritis will occur with no pain at all. In some cases, the ankles of the patient will swell.


Lungs: If the lungs are affected, it will cause pleuritis that also causes the symptoms such as chest pain and breathing problems.


Central Nervous Symptom: If this is attacked, this will cause the symptoms that occur in the head.


Blood Vessels: The person with lupus that attacks the blood vessels will likely to have vasculitis that affects the circulation of the blood.


Blood: If affected, the person can have anemia leukopenia and thrombocytopenia and abnormal blood clotting.


Heart: The heart can have inflammation if affected by lupus. This will cause chest pains and other symptoms of lupus.


Reverse Your Lupus

June 8, 2011   No Comments

Are women more likely to have allergic reactions to medications than men? Does Lupus play a role?

I am continually developing allergic reactions to medications and it is really getting bad. Tonight, I took aspirin and broke out in hives and my eyes swelled together. That leaves only Tylenol for me to take when I have pain. What happens when I develop an allergy to it? I have yo-yo ANA, speckled. C-3 and C-4 is yo-yo as well, so I have not been diagnosed with Lupus.

Answer
I haven’t seen any studies that has shown that women are more likely to be allergic to medications but it makes sense because of the fact that women’s bodies don’t process the medicines the same way a man’s body does. They are trying to do more research in to gender specific medical treatment to make it easier to treat women.

I have met a number of people (a lot of them women) that are allergic to dyes in the medications.

Yes, it is possible that for some if Lupus is an issue it could make it harder to take medications. This would be an interesting question for a rheumatologist as well.

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November 16, 2010   No Comments

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