While arthritis is not uncommon in children as everyone thinks, it affects girls more than boys, health experts said recently.
Rheumatoid arthritis is an autoimmune and inflammatory disease, which means that the disease is caused when the body's immune system attacks healthy cells by mistake. It mainly affects multiple joints at once, causing painful swelling (inflammation) in the affected parts of the body.
When this condition affects children, it is known as juvenile rheumatoid arthritis or juvenile idiopathic arthritis. It is an umbrella term for inflammatory arthritis that affects children under the age of 16.
Children suffer from joint pain, swelling, limited joint movement, and early morning stiffness lasting more than 15 minutes. Few kids with arthritiscan also have red eyes, pain, redness, and blurring of vision.
"It is the most common pediatric rheumatological disorder and affects about an estimated 350,000 to 1.3 million children in India," Dr. Sanjeev Kapoor, Senior Consultant Rheumatology, at the Indian Spinal Injuries Centre, told IANS.
"Arthritis is not uncommon in children as everyone thinks and has an incidence of 0.04 to 4 per 1000 children worldwide," added Dr. Sunitha Kayidhi, Consultant Rheumatologist, Yashoda Hospitals Hyderabad.
There are different types of juvenile arthritis: while oligoarticular arthritis (less than 4 joints involved ) and polyarticular arthritis (more than 5 joints involved) are common in girls, enthesitis-related arthritis is seen in young boys (below 6 years) where they have heel pain, back pain, and stiffness in the early mornings. On the other hand, systemic arthritis and psoriatic arthritis affect boys and girls equally, the doctors said.