A Call for Awareness
There is a pathological family that falls under the discipline of Rheumatology, known as Heritable Disorders of the Connective Tissues. The individual pathologies vary widely in both severity and symptoms, and include disorders such as Marfan Syndrome (MFS), Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome (EDS), and Osteogenesis Imperfecta (OI). One symptom that each of these disorders present with is joint hypermobility. It is advantageous for rheumatologist, then, to look for joint hypermobility first in all of their patients; if the patient does not display hypermobility then the doctor can safely rule out an entire class of disorders, and if the patient is in fact found to be hypermobile, the doctor will have a very specific idea of what is wrong and the course of treatment needed. The current methods employed to diagnose disorders such as MFS, EDS, and OI are both costly and time consuming – many tests such as blood work, X-rays and MRIs must be repeated to look at tighter and tighter parameters. Since ...
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