
I am sharing with you today a great arthritis resource called Arthritis-health. The website offers a growing collection of information about arthritis and is geared towards both patients and caregivers. At Arthritis-health, you can find a countless articles, videos, and expert interviews about treating, managing and living with arthritis. The information comes from various medical professionals and arthritis experts.
Whatever you are looking for, you are sure to find it at Arthritis-health. If you are looking to find out about arthritis friendly exercises, this article by Marco Funiciello, DO is a sure bet. Dr. Funiciello shares the benefits of physical activity along with what to consider before beginning exercise. Next, the doctor goes into exercise adaptions for people with arthritis and ways to get exercise as an arthritis patient. Last, the doctor discusses recommendations for exercises as suggested by the American College of Rheumatology.
This next article by Dr. Judith Frank describes the characteristics of rheumatoid arthritis. Dr. Frank dives into several aspects, including the stages of RA, what researchers believe causes RA, how important early and aggressive treatment is, physical and emotional symptoms, diagnostic criteria and treatment, including surgery.
Arthritis-health also has a vast collection of videos. For example, the video titled Hip Replacement Surgery offers an animation on the basics of hip replacement. The procedure involves replacing the hip joint with a prosthetic implant. It is a last option after conservative treatments such as physical therapy and medication have not worked.
There many more articles and other resources at Arthritis-health. Will you please check out Arthritis-health and leave some feedback here?
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About Lana
I will start by saying that my blog is about who I am and how I have grown, preserved, and endured since being diagnosed.
I was diagnosed with rheumatoid arthritis (RA) and fibromyalgia (FM) nearly five years ago after many years of dealing with symptoms that no doctor could explain. All I wanted was closure and, to me, that meant finding an answer to why I didn’t feel normal. Several days after having my now almost five year old, I awoke to the inability to walk or use my hands and within a week, I finally had a diagnosis and this time, it sank in that it was real thing.
Steroids, a lack of energy, and physical pain take a toll on you. What the illness does to us, we cannot control. How we respond, how we choose to fight back, and how we go on is our defense against the war waging inside of us. Imagine being in a dark room and trying to make your way around. Then, imagine that you find a light switch and the room becomes dim, not bright, but enough for you to navigate your way. For years, I was in the dark about what was happening to me, and then one day, the room became dimly lit. What I wanted was closure but instead I found that there were more questions than there were answers. I learned that I had to change my perceptions on what closure meant to me and in this case it meant accepting that chronic illness was now a part of my life.
One of the things that I do know is that I am not alone and that there were so many exceptional people who, like me, are looking for closure, answers and normalcy. I share my experiences because I want to live a “normal” life and I want others to see that it is okay to have a normal life and to keep dreaming, trying, believing and looking towards the future. I write about my life with RA and FMS, my diagnosis, and my quest to find answers and I continue to do so because when it gives others hope it gives me hope too.
I have found through my experience and the experiences of others dealing with the same conditions that living with arthritis and/or an autoimmune disease gets easier even though the disease gets harder. RA and FM may control how I physically feel but they do not control who I am or how I choose to respond. It is never going to be easy and some days, the emotional part is worse than the physical but we all struggle with something and for me, it is RA and FM.