How Much Do You Know About Autoimmune Diseases?
Autoimmune diseases can affect anyone, but women are at greater risk. These diseases also share common symptoms: severe tiredness (fatigue), dizziness, and low-grade fever. Test your knowledge of this serious—and mysterious—class of diseases.
1. Which of these is an autoimmune disease?
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AIDS
stands for "acquired immunodeficiency syndrome," but this disease is not an autoimmune
illness. It is caused by a virus (HIV) that damages the person's immune system.
Autoimmune diseases include systematic lupus erythematosus, rheumatoid arthritis,
psoriasis, type 1 diabetes, Crohn's disease, and multiple sclerosis.
2. If you have an autoimmune disease, what happens with the immune system?
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Antibodies attack the body's tissues, organs, or cells.
3. Autoimmune diseases strike which group more often?
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Researchers don't know why this is so, but one theory suggests that the hormone estrogen
may play a role.
4. What tissues, organs, or body systems can be affected by autoimmune diseases?
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Autoimmune disease can affect any organ in the body. But some diseases attack specific
organs. In Crohn's disease, for instance, the area affected is the gut. In multiple
sclerosis, the areas affected are the brain and spinal cord.
5. Lupus is more common among women in which ethnic group?
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Lupus is more common among African-American women. Hispanic women also are more likely
to develop lupus.
6. How does a person develop an autoimmune disease?
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Autoimmune diseases have a variety of causes, although healthcare providers don't
yet
know them all. Some, such as rheumatic fever, develop after a streptococcal infection.
People taking methyldopa for high blood pressure can develop lupus. Stopping the
medicine usually stops lupus. Some autoimmune diseases run in families, which suggests
that genes play a role.
7. Why are some autoimmune diseases difficult to diagnose?
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For many autoimmune diseases, the vague early symptoms and lack of specific diagnostic
tests make them difficult to diagnose.
8. Which of these autoimmune diseases can be cured?
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There
are currently no cures for these diseases. But some, such as multiple sclerosis and
rheumatoid arthritis, can go into remission even without treatment. For the most part,
though, autoimmune illnesses are chronic, needing lifelong monitoring and care. Medicine
can help reduce or stop the damage caused by some of the diseases. Medicine can also
help suppress the immune system's response, helping to ease symptoms caused by the
disease.
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