Migraine—Not A Symptom of SLE

Systemic Lupus Erythematosus, SLE, or commonly termed Lupus, is an autoimmune condition which causes inflammation of the body’s organs like kidneys, brain, skin, joints and other tissue groups. This is a chronic condition it is more common among women than men. In terms of demographics, Lupus is diagnosed more commonly among African-Americans and Asians. The cause of SLE is still unknown but some studies have linked it to the presence of Lupus Antibodies.
For the past decades, many physicians believe that headaches, more specifically migraines, are symptoms of this condition. However, researches from Greece proved otherwise. In their latest study linking migraine attacks to diagnosis of lupus, little connection was observed. According to them, migraines should be treated as a separate condition and should not be considered as a symptom of lupus. Previous studies, according to them, may have suffered from methodological errors and these errors led most physicians to consider migraine attacks as something that usually come with the autoimmune disease.

Common symptoms of #lupus include anemia, rashes on several parts of your
The correlation between #lupus and #hair loss:
RT @: Experiencing #lupus hair loss? @ explains what you can do about it! ~< >a href="http://t.co/E3e7pCC2"/a< #>em/em< >a href="http://search.twitter.com/search?q=%23hcsm" title="#hcsm" class=" "/a
RT @: Experiencing #lupus hair loss? @ explains what you can do about it! ~< >a href="http://t.co/E3e7pCC2"/a< #>em/em< >a href="http://search.twitter.com/search?q=%23hcsm" title="#hcsm" class=" "/a
"It looks so very, very different from person to person," said Christine John-Fuller, president and CEO of the Lupus Foundation of America's Piedmont Chapter. "For one person, it's a skin manifestation and it's a rash or hair loss.






