There have been unbelievable improvements in the diagnoses and treatment of rheumatoid arthritis (RA) in the recent years. RA has in the past, led to joint damage and disability. But, today, there are new drugs and new ways of using those drugs, new diagnostic tools, and a new understanding of how RA affects the body that allows the doctors to reduce the symptoms and even slow down the process of joint destruction. This allows someone who develops RA today to have a very good chance of a more active and productive life.
Because of the advances of more recent years, the discovery of joint damage begins early in the course of RA. There is a consensus that if caught in a
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