The results provide evidence for free radical and inflammatory activity in SLE and suggest potential targets to reduce the risk of cardiovascular disease in these patients.
Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) patients suffer from excess cardiac deaths due to accelerated atherosclerosis. Endothelial dysfunction is a marker of early atherosclerosis. We tested the hypothesis that SLE patients have impaired endothelial function and assessed the relationship between endothelial function and clinical outcome over the subsequent five years. Thirty-six female SLE patients were compared with 22 healthy age and sex matched controls. Endothelial dependent vasodilatation (EDD) was assessed at the brachial artery in response to shear stress. Endothelium-independent dilatation induced by glyceryl trinitrate was also measured. Patients were followed for up to five years and the development of damage in the cardiovascular and other systems recorded. SLE patients showed significantly impaired endothelial function (median EDD 5.6%, IQR 3.1-7.2%) compared with healthy controls (median EDD 8.0%, IQR 6.3-9.3%; P = 0.001). Endothelium independent dilatation did not differ between the two groups. Endothelial function was significantly worse in postmenopausal compared with premenopausal women (median EDD 6.6%, IQR 3.9-7.8% versus 3.1%, IQR 2.6-5.1%; P = 0.016). Total cholesterol was inversely correlated with endothelial function in SLE patients (Spearman correlation r = -0.422, P = 0.025). There was no relationship between endothelial function and the development of damage in any organ system, including the cardiovascular system during patient follow-up. Patients with SLE have impaired endothelial Lupus (2007) 16, 84-88.
Patient education is an important component of the management of chronic diseases such as SLE. We have investigated the value of the World Wide Web as a medium for delivery of SLE patient information. Volunteers recruited from the clinic and from the website completed interviews and questionnaires aimed at defining their information needs. A new website was then established and its impact on users tested using knowledge questionnaires. The new website was used extensively (20-30 users each day) over the 24 month period of study until April 2001. A total of 510 participants completed an online questionnaire that showed that for some users it was their first use of the internet to gather lupus information, but the majority (58.9%) accessed it at least monthly for this purpose. We also found that, while most users (56.9%) found current disease information was at an appropriate level, 37.5% thought it was too basic. Knowledge questionnaires from 42 participants before and after using the site showed a significant rise in users' knowledge of the areas covered by the site. As far as we are aware this study is the first to show that a patient-oriented website can have a positive effect on disease knowledge. The relative ease with which good quality information can be disseminated via the web suggests that this medium is likely to be less costly and perhaps more educationally effective than printed information, and so is likely to become a primary vehicle for patient education. The website tested can be found at: www.rheumatology.bham.ac.uk/lupus/intro.html.
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