Showing posts with label Arthritis. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Arthritis. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 08, 2009

About Connective Tissue Disorder

A friend sent me a link: http://www.healthblurbs.com/about-connective-tissue-disorder-autoimmune-and-mixed-connective-tissue-disease/

I found this article written in an easy-to-understand manner and so informative that I have included a permanent link to it (right hand column). Here are a few quotes from the article, but please take the time to read the entire article. I'm sure you'll find it worthwhile.

Your connective tissue is a fibrous material that provides supportive structure to your body tissue and organs. It’s what gives you shape, holding the framework of your body and cells together.
Your connective tissue is mainly composed of two structural proteins, collagen and elastin. For many connective tissue disorders, an immune system response, directed against your own connective tissue, causes inflammation that damages your collagen and elastin.


The cause for your immune system to turn on the body its designed to protect is unknown.
Autoimmunity is not the only basis giving rise to a connective tissue issue. A couple connective tissue diseases have a genetic component cause involved, like:
  • homocystinuria
  • Marfan syndrome

  • osteogenesis imperfecta

  • Ehlers-Danlos syndrome

Oftentimes, the initial symptoms for an individual connective tissue disorder overlap with those of another, such as fatigue, fever and weight loss. So sometimes, the diagnosis of undifferentiated connective tissue disease may be given until a more defining set of symptoms appear.
A connective tissue disease can manifest itself via a myriad of symptoms that indicate various parts of your body are being affected. For instance, here are a couple areas and just some corresponding symptoms:
Autoimmune connective tissue disorder development can arise slowly or swiftly. And you may go through health oscillations between periods of remission and flares. Feeling healthy today, but perhaps not the next.

Sunday, September 16, 2007

From the Blog of Dr Aimee Eggleston

Another horse diagnosed with various ailments until the true cause was found. Please click on the link below to read the entire blog entry.
Blog of Dr Aimee Eggleston

Question: “I recently had to put down my 16 year old Arabian due to Degenerative Suspensory Disease (DSD). Over the past few years we were told that his problem was arthritis (due to being a english pleasure saddle seat horse). Then we were told that his problem was

Degenerative Suspensory Ligament Desmitis (DSLD), also known as Equine Systemic Proteoglycan Accumulation (ESPA) is a serious disease. Horses afflicted with DSLD have a poor prognosis for continued athletic performance.