Discover and read the best of Twitter Threads about #scleroderma

Most recents (3)

“I turned in my man card”
November is men’s health awareness month so what better time to share the key findings from my recent paper. Available here open access: academic.oup.com/rheumatology/a…
Men with #scleroderma / #systemicsclerosis (SSc) have lower survival rates than women (~2:1) but no studies had previously explored men’s experiences and support needs. So I conducted focus groups with men with SSc in UK and USA
Many of the participants discussed their mortality often using dark humour to make it easier to talk about (“I’ve stopped buying green bananas”) They worried about how their families would cope and made plans for a future they didn’t expect to be part of (often financially).
Read 12 tweets
Hey #MedTwitter fam!

Time for the inaugural #MedDermTwagTeam #tweetorial on #Scleroderma

This is a diffuse (get it?) topic so @RashDecisionz & I will try to keep it focused

I’ll tweet on illness script

S/O to @CPSolvers @MedEdTwagTeam and many others for the inspiration!
1/12
Who else gets confused with the terminology? I sure do

The confusion may arise because scleroderma is a spectrum of disorders. Also, people say Scleroderma interchangeably with #SystemicSclerosis

The subtype is based on extent of skin & organ involvement

2/12 Image
Let’s focus on Systemic Sclerosis (SSc)

SSc is a multi-organ, progressive vasculopathy and fibrosing condition with skin being main target

Earliest sign is Raynaud phenomenon, occurs in 95% of pts

Skin thickening w/o Raynauds makes SSc unlikely

nature.com/articles/s4158…

3/12
Read 13 tweets
.@SarahbaxterSTM's argues that #fibromyalgia, #mecfs, #lupus, #depression, self-harming and #anorexia are caused by female ambition and fragility.

What's c. 1880 is new again.

thetimes.co.uk/article/kirsty…
This is just so silly. In the 19th century, there was a panic in the medical profession (and among social commentators) about women becoming ill with neurological and "nervous" conditions because they were overworking their brains/nerves, which were naturally weaker than men's.
This “fact” was used to bolster the argument in favor of stopping women's formal education after age 16 and most certainly not letting them enroll in university.
Read 26 tweets

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