It's Not Just Growing Pains: A Guide to Childhood Muscle, Bone and Joint Pain, Rheumatic Diseases, and the Latest Treatments
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| It's Not Just Growing Pains: A Guide to Childhood Muscle, Bone and Joint Pain, Rheumatic Diseases, and the Latest Treatments | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Arthritis is usually considered a disease of older adults, but nearly 300,000 children in the United States suffer from some form of arthritis or rheumatic disease, such as juvenile arthritis (JRA), fibromyalgia, chronic fatigue, systemic lupus erythematosus, scleroderma, or Kawasaki disease. Yet until now very little information has been available to guide parents and doctors in properly diagnosing such children.
Here is a readable, reliable guide to the common causes of bone, joint, muscle, and arthritis pain in children, designed to help parents and physicians understand these disorders, arrive at the proper diagnosis, and choose the most effective treatment. In this comprehensive resource, Dr. Thomas Lehman--the head of one of the most prestigious pediatric rheumatology programs in the world--offers easy-to-understand information on the causes, symptoms, tests, and treatments for a wide variety of rheumatic diseases and childhood pain. Dr. Lehman writes with great clarity, providing numerous case examples that illustrate the topic at hand and offering practical, down-to-earth advice. Equally important, he answers the questions that parents are most likely to ask: What should they observe in their children? What questions should they ask their doctor? Which tests are necessary? What risk factors should they be aware of? And how can they help their children cope with the social and psychological aspects of their illness. The book summarizes diagnostic tests, discusses the most effective medications, and discusses physical therapy, alternative therapy, and surgical options that are available. Clearly written, thorough, authoritative, and up-to-date, It's Not Just Growing Pains is the definitive resource available on the subject for parents and health care professionals, helping them to understand the children's pain and find the best available care. |
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| 03-26-08 | 2 | 1\1 |
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I have to admit I was excited to find this book and read these reviews. However, before ordering I decided to search the book's text (thanks Amazon for a great feature!) and make sure what I was looking for was included in the book. It was.
That said, the information was out of date, inaccurate, and could cause patients with hypermobility to blow it off as no big deal when it can be a very big deal. There is a brief but inaccurate mention of Ehlers-Danlos syndrome after BHJS. My alarm when off when he mentions people with EDS often are tall, thin, with long arms and legs. That isn't true at all, and could cause people to not consider EDS as why their hypermobile children are having problems. Ehlers-Danlos is a big deal. If you know your child has it you can work towards protecting their joints to save them pain later in life. There is an argument that benign hypermobility syndrome is what isn't real, that it is actually a mild form of Ehlers- Danlos syndrome. Only time will tell what the medical community decides. Since there are six subtypes of Ehlers-Danlos syndrome, each different from the other, and varying levels of affliction, it is scary to think that someone is writing books like this with poor information. If you don't know what you are talking about, don't address it. Or, update the book to reflect the current information. Better yet, contact the National Institute of Health and get the most current research on it. Since I can't know how accurate he is on other conditions I gave two stars. I guess like anything you should use this book as only a small piece of research, and find a good pediatric rheumatologist and/or geneticist who specializes in connective tissues to help you figure out what is going on with your child. (Review Data Last Updated: 2008-11-03 01:23:08 EST)
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