Long COVID: defining the role of rheumatology in care and research
This is a commentary in the Lancet, advocating for rheumatology to be involved in the care of Long-Covid patients.
Right... And you'd think that they can say no to ME but say yes to LC?
Right. And you think you can do all that for LC patients but not ME patients?
This sounds more like a courtship for a well funded disease. But they still seem to leave ME behind.
Link to article: https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lanrhe/article/PIIS2665-9913(22)00266-1/fulltext
This is a commentary in the Lancet, advocating for rheumatology to be involved in the care of Long-Covid patients.
Given rheumatologists' familiarity with chronic fatigue states in both inflammatory and non-inflammatory diseases,
7 the frequent presence of neurocognitive complaints in many rheumatic disorders, and rheumatologists' particular expertise in musculoskeletal pain, our field has potential to contribute meaningfully to these efforts.
Right... And you'd think that they can say no to ME but say yes to LC?
Unfortunately, at present, there are no approved therapies for long COVID, but numerous candidate therapies have been widely discussed, including antivirals, immunomodulators, metabolomic modifiers, and a host of integrative medicine approaches. With regards to immune-based therapies, rheumatologists' extensive clinical trial experience with agents now being considered candidate therapies for long COVID make them particularly suited for the task.
10
Right. And you think you can do all that for LC patients but not ME patients?
At present, rheumatologists and other subspecialists are limited to some of the foremost tools in our armamentarium (ones that we have long offered to legions of patients with incurable chronic diseases): careful listening, providing validation, and offering empathy. These tools, although in themselves not curative, for now could help patients with long COVID.
This sounds more like a courtship for a well funded disease. But they still seem to leave ME behind.
Link to article: https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lanrhe/article/PIIS2665-9913(22)00266-1/fulltext