Conference Coverage

Physical therapy, exercise still relevant for ankylosing spondylitis


 

REPORTING FROM SPARTAN


“The literature isn’t impressive,” said Mr. Papachristos. “But, that’s because it isn’t uniform. No specific protocol is being followed.”

He compared what he believes is happening with what he believes to be a better alternative.

What he calls the hit-them-with-everything approach includes diagnosis, NSAIDs, biologics, smoking cessation at the same time as exercise that includes posture, swimming, strength, and aerobic conditioning. According to Mr. Papachristos, this approach can lead to patient burnout.

Indeed, research from 2010 published in the Journal of Rheumatology showed that 40% of patients with ankylosing spondylitis said that exercise takes too much time, 60% said that exercise is hard work, 60% reported being fatigued by exercise, and 20% said that their family members did not encourage exercise (J Rheumatol. 2010 Mar 1. doi: 10.3899/jrheum.090655).

Pages

Recommended Reading

Flare of nonradiographic axial SpA occurs often after adalimumab withdrawal for remission
MDedge Internal Medicine
TNFi response evaluations may conflict when fibromyalgia, axial SpA coexist
MDedge Internal Medicine
FDA approves infliximab biosimilar Ixifi for all of Remicade’s indications
MDedge Internal Medicine
TNF inhibitors curb spinal x-ray progression in ankylosing spondylitis
MDedge Internal Medicine
Role of musculoskeletal ultrasound expands in rheumatic diseases
MDedge Internal Medicine
Arthritis limits physical activity the most in the South
MDedge Internal Medicine
FDA approves certolizumab label update for pregnancy, breastfeeding
MDedge Internal Medicine
Axial SpA disease activity remains mostly stable throughout pregnancy
MDedge Internal Medicine
TB in 2017: Good news and bad news
MDedge Internal Medicine
MACE risk similar across arthritis subtypes
MDedge Internal Medicine