Arthritis in Children
From the Arthritis Foundation of America
Introduction
As parents of a child with arthritis, much of the responsibility for the health care and emotional well-being of your child with arthritis will depend on you. You will be the ones to:
-be sure she sees all members of her health-care team as needed;
-see that she takes her medications are prescribed;
-watch for any side effects the drugs may cause;
-help her do exercises to relieve pain and stiffness;
-provide encouragement and support to her and other family members; and
-work with teachers and school officials to make sure her needs are met.
For this reason, it is very important for you to know as much as possible about your child’s arthritis and its care, as well as the effects it can have on family life. This booklet provides a starting point for discussions with your child’s health-care team.
What Kinds of Arthritis Affect Children?
The word arthritis refers to inflammation (that is, swelling, heat and pain) involving the joints. Arthritis is frequently a chronic illness, meaning that it may last for months or years. About 200,000 children - or 2.9 in every 1,000 - in the United States have some form of arthritis.
The most common form of arthritis in children is juvenile rheumatoid arthritis (JRA). However, children may also be affected by arthritis as a feature of other diseases including those listed on the following pages.
-Systemic Lupus Erythematosus, a chronic inflammatory disease characterized by fever and rash that may attack organs such as joints, kidneys, the brain, lungs and heart.
-Juvenile dermatomyositis, a disease that causes a skin rash and weak muscles in children, and may be accompanied by swollen joints.
-The spondyloarthropathies of childhood, diseases in children that involve the spine. In some but not all children with these diseases, a protein called HLA-B27 is found on the white blood cells. The spondyloarthropathies of childhood include:
-Ankylosing spondylitis, a type of arthritis which primarily affects the spine and hips. It usually occurs in males.
-Reiter’s disease, a form of arthritis that may cause inflammation of the urinary tract and eyelids, mouth ulcers and/or skin rash.
-B-27 arthritis, a form of arthritis that occurs more often in older boys and affects only a few joints - usually the back, and large joints of the legs such as hips, knees and ankles. If particular changes are seen in X-rays, B-27 arthritis may be reclassified as ankylosing spondylitis.
-Psoriatic arthritis, a type of arthritis that may occur with the skin condition, psoriasis. It affects both boys and girls.
-Scleroderma, a disease that can affect the skin, joints, blood vessels and internal organs.
-Inflammatory bowel (Crohn’s) disease, a disease that can affect the intestines, causing diarrhea and abdominal pain. It can be associated with arthritis and fever; these sometimes appear before the digestive symptoms.
What is Juvenile Rheumatoid Arthritis (JRA)?
Juvenile rheumatoid arthritis (JRA) affects about 71,000 children in the United States. It is a disease of the joints that may also affect other organs. JRA is often a mild condition which causes few problems, but in severe cases it can produce serious complications. Its signs and symptoms may change from day to day, even from morning to afternoon. Joint stiffness and pain may be mild one day but become so severe the next that the child cannot move without great difficulty.
Periods when the arthritis is particularly active are called flares.
There are at least three forms of JRA. Each form begins in a different way and has different signs and symptoms. The three forms are:
-Polyarticular JRA, which affects five or more joints;
-Paucuarticular JRA, which affects four or fewer joints; and
-Systemic JRA, which affects both the joints and the internal organs.
Each of these forms is discussed in this booklet.
What Causes JRA?
No one knows the cause of JRA, but we know that it involves abnormalities of the immune system. The immune system defends our bodies against bacteria, viruses and other foreign substances.
Some research suggests that in autoimmune diseases such as JRA, one type of white blood cells called lymphocytes loses the ability to tell parts of ones body, such as cartilage, from harmful agents like bacteria or viruses. This results in the release of chemicals that can damage the body’s own tissues, in a process called inflammation.
The painful joint swelling children with JRA experience is one example of inflammation; another is iridocyclitis, an inflammation in the front of the eye, near the iris.
There is a great deal of research to find out what causes arthritis. Once this in known, it may be possible to cure this illness or prevent it from starting.
We do know that JRA is not contagious, so your child didn’t catch it from anyone and can’t give it to anyone. We also know that heredity plays some part in the development of several forms of arthritis. However, the inherited trait alone does not cause the illness. We think that this trait along with some other unknown factors triggers the disease. It is unusual for more than one child in the family to have arthritis.
Common Features of JRA
Arthritis is characterized by four major observable changes in the joint. However, since JRA affects each child differently, your child may not experience all of these changes. Children also vary in the degree to which they are affected by any particular symptom. The most common features of JRA are joint inflammation, joint contracture, joint damage and altered growth. Other symptoms your child may experience include joint stiffness following decreased activity, and muscle and other soft-tissue weakness.
Joint Inflammation
Joint inflammation is the most common symptom of JRA. It causes heat, pain, swelling and stiffness in joints. The lining of the joint, called the synovium, becomes swollen and overgrown and produces too much fluid. This causes swelling, stiffness, pain, warmth and sometimes redness of the skin over the affected joints.
Joint Contracture
Since it usually hurts to move an inflamed joint, your child may hold it still in a bent position. If she holds a sore joint in a fixed position for a long time, the muscles around the joint will become stiff and weak.
After a while, the tendons may tighten up and shorten, causing a deformity called a joint contracture. Doctors usually prescribe an exercise program to prevent this from happening.
Joint Damage
In some children with severe disease, long-lasting inflammation damages the joint surfaces. This is called joint erosion, and can cause pain and limitation of motion.
Altered Growth
Sometimes joint inflammation either speeds up or slows down the growth centers in bones. This can make the affected bones longer, shorter or bigger than normal. If the growth centers in many bones have been damaged by inflammation, a child may stop growing entirely. If no damage has occurred, however, the child will usually continue to grow once the JRA is under control.
Features of Specific Types of JRA
Each of the three types of JRA has specific features. The most common features for each are discussed below, along with other possible features.
Polyarticular JRA
Polyarticular means “many joints”. In this form of JRA, five or more joints are affected. Girls get polyarticular arthritis more often than boys. Because it can be severe, the most powerful medications are recommended for this type of JRA.
Most Common Features
-usually affects the small joints of the fingers and hands;
-can also affect weight-bearing and other joints, especially the knees, as well as the hips, ankles and feet, neck and jaw; and
-often affects the same joint on both sides of the body.
Other Possible Features
-low fever;
-a positive blood test for rheumatoid factor; and
-rheumatoid nodules, or lumps, on an elbow or other point of the body that receives a lot of pressure from chairs, shoes or other objects.
Pauciarticular JRA
Pauciarticular means “few joints”. In this form of JRA, four or fewer joints are affected.
Most Common Features
-usually affects the large joints (knees, ankles or elbows);
-often affects a particular joint on only one side of the body; and
-may cause iridocyclitis, and eye inflammation
Systemic JRA
Systemic means “affecting the body generally”. Systemic JRA affects a child’s internal organs as well as the joints, and may take months to diagnose. This is the least common form of JRA. Boys and girls are equally likely to get this kind of JRA. In some, the systemic symptoms of the disease and the fever may go away completely, although the joint-related symptoms of arthritis may remain.
Most Common Features
High fevers usually start in the late afternoon or evening. The child’s temperature may go up to 103 degrees or higher and then return to normal within a few hours. Chills and shaking often go along with the fever and the child may feel very sick. Periods of fever can last for weeks or even months, but rarely go on for more than six months.
Pale red spots often appear on the child’s chest and thighs and sometimes on other parts of the body. This rash comes and goes for many days in a row.
Joint inflammation may accompany the fever or may not start until weeks or even months later. Some children have severe pain in their joints when they have a fever and then feel much better when their temperature goes down. Joint problems can be a major long-term difficulty for children with this kind of arthritis.
Other Possible Features
-inflammation of the outer lining of the heart, the heart itself or the lungs;
-anemia (low red blood count);
-a high white blood cell count in the blood; and
-enlarged lymph nodes, liver and spleen.
Regular visits to your child’s doctor are important so these problems can be checked and treated from the beginning.
How is JRA Diagnosed?
In order to make a diagnosis of JRA, the arthritis must have been constantly present for six or more consecutive weeks.
The signs and symptoms of JRA vary from child to child. There is no single test that makes the diagnosis of JRA. Therefore, your doctor may go through many steps to find out if your child really does have JRA. The main steps involved in diagnosis are discussed below.
Your Child’s Health History
To make a correct diagnosis, the doctor will ask questions about your child’s recent symptoms, medications she is taking, and any previous medical problems.
The doctor may also wish to rule out other possible causes of arthritis through various tests. Many viral infections can lead to temporary joint problems in children, but in these cases the arthritis usually goes away rapidly. Other diseases can cause arthritis. Sometimes a bacterial infection of bone or cartilage can cause joint swelling or pain. Prompt diagnosis is important to allow proper antibiotic treatment.
The doctor may also want to know if other members of the family have had any other form of arthritis, since some forms may be inherited.
Physical Examination
During the physical examination, the doctor will look for joint inflammation, rashes, nodules and eye problems.
The doctor must be able to find evidence of joint inflammation to be sure the problem is JRA. A child who complains of aches and pains, but shows no joint changes, may not have JRA. In a few cases, a physically healthy child experiencing acute emotional stress may complain of sore joints.
An ophthalmologist may also need to examine your child’s eyes to check for signs of iridocyclitis.
Laboratory Tests
Although there are several laboratory tests that may support a diagnosis of JRA, there is no single test that provides positive proof one way or another. The most common tests are:
-erythrocyte sedimentation rate (sed rate);
-rheumatoid antibody test (ANA);
-HLA-B27 typing;
-hemoglobin test; and
-urinalysis.
If the diagnosis is particularly hard to make, the doctor may do additional tests to rule out other diseases.
X-ray Examinations
X-ray examinations of joints may be helpful early in the course of the illness to find out if another condition such as a bone infection, tumor or fracture is causing the problem. Later on, X-rays may be used to check on joint damage, or changes in bones. X-rays of the spine help the doctor tell if ankylosing spondylitis is present.
Your child’s physician may also suggest magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), a technology that uses magnetic waves to provide images of the inside of the body without harmful radiation.
Joint Fluid and Tissue Tests
A sample of fluid from one or more joints may be withdrawn by a needle and examined to find out if there is an infection in the joint.
Sometimes the doctor will take a small bit of tissue from a joint or a nodule for examination in the laboratory. This is called a biopsy.
Does JRA Have Long-Term Effects?
JRA is a chronic disease - one that may last for many years. Eventually, there are good chances that your child will get well and experience no serious, permanent disability. Children with JRA can usually keep up with school and many social activities. Some changes may need to be made when the child has a flare or if there has been joint damage.
Sometimes, the signs and symptoms of JRA may go away. When this happens, it is called a remission. A remission may last for months, or years, or even forever. But no one can be sure this will happen in your child.
While most children with JRA do well in the long run, parents should be aware of possible long-term consequences. Children with pauciarticular JRA have a higher risk of chronic eye inflammation. Some children with pauciarticular or systemic JRA may have serious joint problems or develop other long-term complications, such as decreased growth.
There is no fast and simple solution to JRA. The most important thing you can do is work with your doctor and other health professionals to manage the disease and keep it under control.
How JRA is Treated
Your child’s treatment program will be based on the kind of arthritis she has and on her specific symptoms. The goals of any treatment program for juvenile rheumatoid arthritis are to:
-control inflammation;
-relieve pain;
-prevent or control joint damage; and
-maximize functional abilities.
Your child’s treatment program will usually include medications, exercise, eye care, dental care and healthy eating practices. Other treatments, such as surgery, may be necessary for special long-term problems.
Some physicians have also found that pain can be lessened by combining medical treatment with techniques such as progressive muscle relaxation, meditative breathing and guided imagery.
Because so many techniques are used to treat children with JRA, the ideal type of care is sometimes called team care or coordinated care. Your child’s health care team will include many different specialists who work together to offer your child a complete treatment program. Pediatric rheumatology centers found in many major medical centers offer this care in one location. If you do not live near a pediatric rheumatology center, your child’s physician will refer you to the specialists she needs.
Note: Because there is no cure for JRA, you may be tempted to try an unproven remedy. Some unproven remedies are harmless, but others are dangerous. Bring any questions to your doctor.
Medications
Several kinds of medications are used to control inflammation and relieve the pain of arthritis. Your child’s doctor will generally try nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs) or aspirin before adding, if necessary, a more potent anti-rheumatic drug or corticosteroid.
All drugs may have side effects, but the effects vary from child to child. One child may respond well to one drug, while another with a similar condition may not benefit or may suffer side effects from the same medication. It is very important that your child’s urine, blood and liver function are tested at regular intervals to make sure everything is normal.
Because many drugs take weeks or months to show any benefit, the physician may keep your child on a particular drug for some time before trying another, unless there are serious side effects.
An important message about arthritis medications: Don’t adjust or stop them without first asking your child’s doctor.
Nonsteroidal Anti-Inflammatory Drugs (NSAIDs)
Your child’s physician will probably prescribe an NSAID as a first step to control swelling and pain. NSAIDs are helpful in all types of JRA. They work by limiting the release of irritating chemicals by the white blood cells. NSAIDs can also be effective in lowering fever.
NSAIDs commonly used to treat JRA include ibuprofen, naproxen and tolmetin. Most NSAIDs are equally effective, but a particular child may respond better to one than to another. NSAIDs are available by prescription or over the counter.
Dose: These drugs may be given as a pill or liquid. The dose varies, depending on the specific NSAID used.
Possible side effects: NSAIDs can have side effects including:
-stomach pain, nausea and vomiting;
-anemia;
-headache;
-blood in the urine;
-severe abdominal pain and peptic ulcer;
-fragility and scarring of the skin (especially with naproxen); and
-difficulty concentrating in school, in some cases.
Aspirin
Aspirin may be used to control swelling and pain in joints and reduce fever in children with systemic JRA.
Dose: Children with JRA for whom aspirin is prescribed must take large amounts of it three or four times a day. Young children should not suck or chew on the aspirin because this may erode the chewing surfaces of the teeth and irritate the gums. Instead, try pre-crushing the dose and having the child swallow it in a small amount of a favorite food such as applesauce or yogurt.
Possible Side Effects: Aspirin may cause:
-stomach pains or stomach bleeding (giving aspirin with food or and antacid may help);
-toxic reactions. Both you and your child should be aware of these signs:
-rapid or deep breathing;
-ringing in the ears;
-decrease in hearing;
-drowsiness;
-nausea;
-vomiting;
-irritability’
-unusual behavior; and
-black tarry stools
-Reye’s Syndrome, a rare disease which sometimes occurs in children who have the chicken pox or the flu, and who are also taking aspirin. The symptoms of Reye’s syndrome are:
-frequent vomiting;
-very painful headaches;
-unusual behavior;
-extreme tiredness; and
-disorientation.
If your child is taking aspirin and develops chicken pox or flu, she should stop taking the aspirin for a while. Your doctor will tell you what to do if this happens.
More Potent Anti-Rheumatic Drugs
The more powerful anti-rheumatic drugs are not usually given by themselves; they are most often effective when given in addition to an NSAID. They are usually prescribed when NSAIDs alone have not been effective or when joint damage occurs, usually in children with polyarticular disease. These more powerful drugs are often able to limit the amount of inflammation seen in severe JRA.
Methotrexate
Methotrexate works primarily by decreasing excessive white blood cell activity. Its use in children is fairly recent. However, methotrexate has been found to be effective in treating children with active polyarticular JRA and some with severe pauciarticular disease.
Dose: Methotrexate is normally given weekly in low doses, usually as a pill taken by mouth. It may also be given by injection.
Possible side effects: In the low doses at which methotrexate is usually prescribed, few serious side effects have been reported. However, regular laboratory monitoring is important. Possible side effects may include:
-nausea;
-mouth sore;
-diarrhea;
-low white blood cell count;
-lung irritation;
-sinus infection;
-liver irritation. Anyone taking methotrexate, including teenagers, should avoid all alcohol intake to lower the risk of irritation the liver; and
-risk of birth defects if taken during pregnancy.
Gold
The gold used in gold treatment is actually a liquid gold salt. It works by interfering with several different functions of white blood cells.
Gold treatment is used to ease morning stiffness and control swelling and pain in joints.
Dose: Gold is given in two ways - by injection in to the muscle, or as oral gold in a capsule taken by mouth. Injections are usually given every week for five or six months, then once or twice a month for as long as necessary. Oral gold (auranofin) is taken daily.
Four to six months may pass before a child responds to gold treatment. Gold is not effective in all children; when it is, treatment may need to be continued for many years.
Possible side effects: Gold can have side effects which may make it necessary to stop treatment. Regular laboratory tests are needed to detect and adverse reactions. Side effects may include:
-skin rash;
-mouth sores;
-kidney problems;
-a low blood count; and
- anemia.
Hydroxychloroquine (Plaquenil)
Hydroxychloroquine (hi-DROCKS-ee-CLOR-o-kwine), sold under the trade name Plaquenil (PLA-kwe-nill), is another drug found to work in some children with polyarticular JRA and other forms of arthritis. While not helpful in all cases, Plaquenil may be useful, particulary when methotrexate or gold have not been completely effective.
Dose: Plaquenil is given in pill form to control swelling and pain in joints. Your doctor will determine the correct amount.
Possible side effects: side effects of Plaquenil may include:
-upset stomach
-skin rash; and
-eye damage. A child taking the drug should be checked every six to 12 months by an ophthalmologist.
Keep this drug out of reach of small children. An overdose of this medication can be fatal.
Corticosteroids
Corticosteroid (CORE-ti-koh-STARE-oyd) drugs are used to treat JRA, especially the systemic form, when it is very severe and has not responded to other drugs.
Corticosteroids used to treat JRA include prednisone and cortisone. These drugs contain cortisone and are not related to the synthetic male-hormone steroids some athletes use.
Corticosteroids are used to control swelling and pain in joints; control pericarditis, pleuritis, continuous high fever or severe anemia; and control iridocyclitis (when given as an ointment or eye drops).
Corticosteroids work swiftly and effectively. However, because of their side effects, they are used with caution.
Dose: If corticosteroid drugs are prescribed, the lowest possible dose will be used for the shortest length of time. Usually, the drug is taken by mouth as a pill or liquid, or it can be given intravenously directly into a vein. It can also be given as an injection into the joint itself, or into a muscle or vein. Other types of steroids include eye drops used to treat iridocyclitis and steroid creams for skin problems.
Possible side effects: Corticosteroids taken as a pill or intravenously for long peroids of time may cause severe problems such as:
-high blood pressure;
-osteoporosis (softening of the bones);
-slowing of the child’s growth rate;
-reduced resistance to infection;
-sudden mood swings;
-increased appetite and weight gain; and
-increased risk for ulcers.
Medicines for the Future
Biologicals are a new class of medications made of synthetic proteins. They are still in the research phase. It is believed that biologicals may slow or stop the harmful immune response that leads to inflammation in the joint.
Biologicals now being studied include monoclonal antibodies, receptor inhibitors, peptide vaccines and intravenous gammaglobulin.
Exercise
Exercise is a very important part of the treatment for JRA. For children with arthritis, the purpose of regular exercise is to:
-keep joints mobile;
-keep muscles strong;
-regain lost motion or strength;
-make everyday activities like walking or dressing easier; and
-improve general fitness and endurance.
Kind of Exercise
There are two kinds of exercise your child might do: therapeutic exercise and sports and recreational activities.
Therapeutic Exercise
While medications reduce pain and inflammation, only therapeutic exercise can restore lost motion in a joint. Therapeutic exercises make it easier for your child to walk and perform other activities of daily living, like opening jars and writing. Range-of-motion exercises keep joints flexible and are especially important for children who have lost motion in a joint, or whose joints have become fixed in a bent position. Strengthening exercises build muscles.
A physical or occupational therapist will show your child how to perform therapeutic exercises at home. Most exercises must be done every day. Hot baths, hot packs and/or cold treatments before exercise can make the therapy easier. The therapist can show you how to make the exercises part of play activities if your child is very young.
Sports and Recreational Activity
Recreational activities help your child to exercise her joints and muscles, develop important social skills and have fun. But remember that recreational activities cannot take the place of therapeutic exercise.
Sports and recreational activities are important for children with arthritis to develop confidence in their physical abilities. Try to let your child pick her own sport or activity of interest, while guiding her toward one that will not hurt her joints. Activities that exercise the joints and muscles without putting too much stress on them, like swimming, should be encouraged.
Strong muscles and joint protection are the keys to participating in sports. Although contact sports are never recommended, even aggressive sports like soccer and basketball may not be off limits for your child. Your child may be able to do special exercises to train for the sport she likes. Protective equipment can further reduce the risk of injury.
Your child’s health team can help you pick up the signals telling you when and whether your child is overdoing it.
Splints
Splints are used to keep joints in the correct position and relieve pain. If a joint is becoming deformed (bent in the wrong position), a splint may be used to stretch that joint gradually back to its normal position. Commonly used splints include knee extension splints, wrist extension splints and ring splints for the fingers.
An occupational or physical therapist usually makes the splint. Arm and hand splints are made from plastic; leg splints are sometimes made of cast material. A splint is custom-made for your child. The therapist will adjust the splint as your child grows, or as the joint position changes.
Splints are usually worn only at night while sleeping to keep the joint extended.
It is important for you child to move and use her joints during the day. At times, however, your child may also wear a different kind of splint, a functional splint (often called an orthosis or brace) during the daytime.
Morning Stiffness Relief
Many children experience a period of stiffness upon getting up each day. Morning stiffness can be one of the best measures of disease activity; the longer the morning stiffness lasts, the more active the disease. Morning stiffness can be relieved by these methods:
-a hot bath or shower;
-sleeping in a sleeping bag;
-range-of-motion exercises;
-a paraffin bath (a tub or warmed wax which coats the small joints of the hands); and
-a cold pack. Though most children do better with warmth, some respond to cold ( a plastic bag filled with ice or frozen vegetable works well).
Diet
Children with JRA sometimes have nutritional problems associated with their illness such as a lack of appetite leading to weight loss and poor growth in height, or excessive weight gain.
Although there is no special diet for children with arthritis, and no special foods that will cure the disease, proper nutrition can improve your child’s overall health and promote normal growth. A registered dietitian can help you make sure your child eats properly by teaching you ways to improve your child’s diet.
Poor Appetite
Loss of appetite often occurs when a child is in a flare. Some children with JRA might feel too sick or too tired to eat. To help your child:
-Encourage her to eat a well-balanced diet a regular meal intervals and include planned snacks even when she may not feel much like eating.
-Try to reduce the amount of food she needs to eat by increasing the nutrient content of each bite of food or drink she eats. For example, add melted cheese, gravies, margarine, dips and offer whole milk. This can help prevent weight loss and poor growth.
Weight Gain
Children with JRA may limit their physical activity if their joints are stiff and painful. As a result, the child may gain too much weight. Corticosteroids can also cause a child to gain weight. Excess weight is unhealthy because it puts more stress on joints such as knees, hips and ankles. Appropriate exercise combined with eating a well-balanced diet based on the basic four food groups can help your child keep a normal body weight.
Dental Care
The most important aspect of dental care for everyone is the prevention of dental disease. Some children with JRA may have difficulty brushing and flossing. Your dentist may suggest various toothbrush handles, electric toothbrushes, floss holders, toothpicks and rinses that will help your child maintain healthy teeth and gums.
Always inform your dentist about the status of your child’s disease and the medications she is taking. Both the JRA and the medications used to treat it may affect the child’s oral health and development. The dentist will also consider these when he is planning any treatment. These considerations may be especially important if general anesthesia, sedation or oral surgery are being planned. Older children who have had joint replacements may require an antibiotic before dental treatment.
The joint in front of the ears, where the lower jaw connects to the base of the skull, is called the temporomandibular joint (TMJ). Arthritis may affect the joint in the same way it does others, by causing pain, stiffness and altered growth. Jaw exercises and heat/cold therapy may be recommended for the pain and stiffness. If the lower jaw does not develop properly, the child with JRA may develop a severe overbite. Your child’s dentist may recommend an early consultation with an orthodontist if this occurs. Surgery is also sometimes necessary for this condition.
A child with JRA may not always have the stamina for even routine dental work, especially if she is having a flare. If possible, shorter appointments may be helpful. Also, schedule an appointment at the time of day your child has the most stamina.
Eye Care
An eye inflammation called iridocyclitis (EER-i-doe-sy-KLY-tis), or closely-related forms called anterior uveitis and iritis, are sometime associated with JRA. Iridocyclitis occurs more often in young girls with pauciarticular JRA whose blood contains a kind of protein known as an antinuclear antibody (ANA). In iridocyclitis, certain tissues in the eyes become inflamed. This inflammation may not cause any obvious eye symptoms until it has gone on for a long time. The symptoms of iridocyclitis which might appear after a while include red eyes, eye pain and failing vision.
It is important for all children with JRA to have their eyes checked by an ophthalmologist (an eye doctor who is an MD) as soon as they are diagnosed. The ophthalmologist can detect the problem early and start treatment to avoid any serious problems.
Children should continue to get periodic eye exams even when the arthritis is inactive and they have no joint swelling, because iridocyclitis may still be present.
Your child should visit the ophthalmologist for a complete medical eye evaluation, including a slit lamp test. This is a simple and painless procedure that can spot problems before you can tell anything is wrong. The eye examination may need to be repeated from time to time, depending on you child’s risk for developing the eye problem. Your doctor will tell you how often you child should be examined. If iridocyclitis is found early and treated properly, it is unlikely to cause any trouble. If it is allowed to go on, it can result in impaired vision or even blindness.
If your child had iridocyclitis, eye drops will be prescribed. One type of eye drops is used to dilate the pupil (make the black spot in the center of the eye bigger). This will keep scars from forming on the pupil. Another kind of eye drop contains a corticosteroid drug which will decrease the inflammation in the eye tissues. When corticosteroids are taken in this form, the side effects are not a serious as when the drug is taken by mouth. If the drops cannot control the iridocyclitis, your child may need to take an anti-inflammatory medication in pill form.
Surgery
Surgery is rarely used to treat JRA early in the course of the disease. However, surgery can be used to relieve pain, release joint contractures and replace a damaged joint.
If surgery is necessary, your doctor may consider joint replacement or soft tissue release as treatment.
Joint Replacement
In joint replacement surgery, a child’s entire joint is replaced with an artificial joint. This procedure is used mainly in older children whose growth is complete and whose joints are badly damaged by arthritis. This operation is usually used to replace the hip, knee or jaw joints. It can reduce pain and improve function.
Soft Tissue Release
Soft tissue release may sometimes be used to improve the position of a joint which has, been pulled out of line by a contracture, a condition caused by a tightening and shortening of the tendons. In this operation, the surgeon cuts and repairs the tight tissues which caused the contracture, allowing the joint to return to a normal position.
What About Emotions?
Your child may feel angry or sad about having arthritis. But be aware that you as parents, siblings and other family members may also have troubling feelings about the disease and its effect on the family. However, acceptance and settling into a routine will benefit everyone in the family.
Parents
When you are first told your child has arthritis, you might feel shocked, numbed or disbelieving. You might also feel guilty, and ask yourself if something you did or didn’t do caused your child’s arthritis. While these thoughts are common to all parents whose children are ill, work hard to put such thinking into perspective. Remember: You are not the reason for your child’s arthritis.
The Child with Arthritis
The child with arthritis may feel many different emotions. Children can feel hurt by an illness that isn’t their fault, blame parents for the illness, adopt a “Why me?” attitude, engage in self-pity or become angry because of restrictions on activities. They may also resent other children who are well, including their brothers and sisters.
Brothers and Sisters
Other children in the family may feel left out and resentful because of the amount of time and attention the child with arthritis requires. Or they may feel guilty, as if their normal bad thoughts towards their brother or sister had somehow caused the illness.
Children may overidentify with the brother or sister with special needs. Some feel a pressure to achieve or make up for what their brother or sister can no longer do. Others want to involve themselves in caregiving to the point where they give up their own normal activities. In these cases, try to help siblings find other ways to deal with their feelings. Whenever possible, let brothers and sisters settle their own differences. Encourage non-disabled siblings to talk with peers who live in homes with similar concerns.
What can you do to help?
The key to dealing with all these emotions is to talk about them with one another.
For Your Child with Arthritis
Talk to you child about how she feels about the illness. Allow you child to express her anger about arthritis from time to time.
Expect your child to behave as well as other children and give her the same responsibilities. Do not give her special privileges, like avoiding light household chores that she is physically able to do, just because she has arthritis.
Encourage your child to learn as much as she can about arthritis and about her treatment program. Older children can be responsible for taking medications on time, reporting any medication side effects to you, and following an exercise program. Prepare them for the change to adult health care.
Remember: Your attitude toward arthritis will affect the way your child feels about arthritis.
For Other Family Members
Talk to your child’s brothers and sisters about arthritis - let them express their feelings about the disease. Encourage the family to treat the child with JRA as they did before she became ill - but at the same time, do remember that she will need some special attention.
For You and Your Spouse
Try not to overprotect your child. Your child might become too dependent if you do everything for her or if you keep her from tasks which she is capable of doing. Don’t be manipulated into allowing activities that shouldn’t be done, but compromise when you can. Being as consistent as possible will help your child learn what is expected. Plan special time to spend alone with your spouse, or with the entire family. When your child first becomes ill, you may set aside relationships with other family members. It is important, however, to continue to talk and spend time with all family members.
Where Can You Turn For Additional Help?
The child with arthritis may develop emotional or behavioral problems that you cannot deal with alone. Other family members may feel overwhelmed. Fortunately, help is available.
Support Groups
Many Arthritis Foundation chapters and some pediatric rheumatology centers have family support groups that provide resources, avenues for sharing ideas and feelings and a place to meet and learn from other families who truly understand what your child is experiencing.
AJAO National and Regional Conferences
AJAO National Family Conferences, held each year in a different region of the country, give parents the opportunity to meet others and learn about many aspects of managing JRA, while children enjoy special activities. Regional juvenile arthritis conferences may also be offered by local chapters.
Counseling
If emotional stress becomes too great, it may be helpful to seek professional counseling. The doctor, nurse or medical social worker may be able to help you, or may be able to refer you to other sources of help.
What About School?
Children with arthritis should nearly always attend a regular school. They should not be isolated from other children of the same age. But because of JRA, your child may need some special materials and services to help her get along in a regular school.
It is important to educate you child’s teachers, the school nurse, and the principal about arthritis and its effects on your child. In general, teachers are cooperative and understanding about JRA. In a few cases, it may be necessary to ask your child’s physician of a member of her health-care team to intervene.
Federal Law that Can Help
Federal laws which give your child rights by barring discrimination against children with disabilities in public schools, and requiring private schools to be accessible, include:
-Section 504 of The Rehabilitation Act of 1973 bans discrimination against disabled persons in programs that receive federal funds.
-Public Law 101-476 says that every child has a right to a free, appropriate public education, whether or not the child has a disability.
-Part H of IDEA Act provides funds to states to identify infants and toddlers with developmental disabilities, and to offer early intervention services until they reach the age of three.
-The Americans With Disabilities Act requires private schools, day-care centers and nurseries to be accessible to children with disabilities, and bans discrimination in hiring and employment.
Managing the Financial Burden
Until universal, comprehensive health care becomes a reality, it may sometimes be difficult to get affordable private health insurance that covers all aspects of arthritis. Some public programs that can help you are listed below.
Supplemental Security Income (SSI)
SSI is a monthly payment from the federal Social Security Administration (SSA) to people of any age who are disabled, blind or aged if they have limited income and resources. In most states, children who receive SSI automatically qualify for Medicaid.
Medicaid
Even if your income is too high for SSI, you may still be able to qualify for Medicaid. In certain states, families with big medical bills may be classified as medically needy if their income is substantially reduced because of their medical expenses. Some states also separate the child’s assets from those of the parents, enabling a child to qualify for Medicaid.
Social Security Disability Insurance (SSDI)
A disabled child under age 22 can receive SSDI benefits based on a parent’s work history and Social Security record if the parent is retired, disabled, or deceased. A child who has received SSDI benefits for 24 months becomes eligible for Medicare.
State Programs
Under the federal Title V program, states receive funds to provide rehabilitation and other services for disabled children under age 16 who qualify. States may also have other funds to cover care and services for families and children.
State High-Risk Insurance Pools
Some states have created programs to provide health insurance to people who cannot get health insurance anywhere else. Coverage may be expensive, and may not cover pre-existing conditions like arthritis.
For More Information
Additional Arthritis Foundation materials about JRA are available through your local Arthritis Foundation chapter. Helpful videos may also be borrowed free from AJAO by calling 404/872-7100.
The Arthritis Foundation
The Arthritis Foundation is the source of help and hope for the nearly 40 million Americans who have arthritis. The Foundation supports research to cure and prevent arthritis and seeks to improve the quality of life for those affected by arthritis.
Formed in 1948, the Arthritis Foundation is the only national, voluntary health organization that works for all people affected by any of the more than 100 forms of arthritis or related diseases. Volunteers in chapters nationwide help to support research, professional and community education programs, services for people with arthritis, government advocacy and fund-raising activities.
The American Juvenile Arthritis Organization (AJAO) is a council of the Arthritis Foundation. AJAO is composed of children, parents, teachers and others who are concerned about juvenile arthritis.
As a not-for-profit organization, the Arthritis Foundation relies on public contributions to fund research and provide service programs. You can become a member of the Arthritis Foundation and help support research and the fight against arthritis. Please contact you local chapter. Your will receive materials about the benefits of membership, including the award-winning