Two arthritis drugs work best in tandem.Two anti-inflammatory drugs Anti-inflammatory drugs A class of drugs that lower inflammation and that includes NSAIDs and corticosteroids. Mentioned in: Antirheumatic Drugs for rheumatoid arthritis rheumatoid arthritis Chronic, progressive autoimmune disease causing connective-tissue inflammation, mostly in synovial joints. It can occur at any age, is more common in women, and has an unpredictable course. work better together than either does individually, researchers report in the Feb. 28 Lancet. The scientists randomly assigned one-third of 682 arthritis sufferers to receive methotrexate methotrexate, drug used in halting the growth of actively proliferating tissues. Introduced in the 1950s, it is used in the treatment of leukemia, psoriasis, and non-Hodgkin's lymphoma. pills, a frontline front·line also front line n. 1. A front or boundary, especially one between military, political, or ideological positions. 2. Basketball See frontcourt. 3. Football The linemen of a team. arthritis drug, plus twice-weekly injections of the drug etanercept. The other volunteers received either methotrexate plus an inert shot, or etanercept shots in combination with inert pills. After one year, 522 of the patients had completed one of the three regimens. Arthritis went into remission Extinguishment or release of a debt. A remission is conventional when it comes about through an express grant to the debtor by a creditor. It is tacit when the creditor makes a voluntary surrender of the original title to the debtor under private signature constituting the in 35 percent of those getting combined treatment but only 16 percent of patients getting just etanercept and only 13 percent of those receiving just methotrexate, says study coauthor Lars Klareskog, a rheumatologist rheumatologist /rheu·ma·tol·o·gist/ (roo?mah-tol´ah-jist) a specialist in rheumatology. rheu·ma·tol·o·gist n. A specialist in the diagnosis and treatment of rheumatic disorders. at the Karolinska Institute in Stockholm. The researchers took X rays of the patients' hands, wrists, and feet at the start of the study and after 6 and 12 months of treatment. The images showed that patients getting the combination of drugs had less joint damage than the others did. Indeed, Klareskog says, the condition of some patients' joints even improved after a year of combination therapy, although the mechanism underlying the repair process is not known. When initially diagnosed with severe rheumatoid arthritis, most patients receive methotrexate or a similar drug, Klareskog says. If that fails to help within 2 months, doctors should use the combination treatment, he says.--N.S. |
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