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ARTHRITIC PAIN IN RELATION TO CHANGES IN WEATHER

EDWIN B. RENTSCHLER, M.D.; FRANCIS R. VANZANT, M.D.; LEONARD G. ROWNTREE, M.D.
JAMA. 1929;92(24):1995-2000. doi:10.1001/jama.1929.02700500007003.
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We have all met sufferers from "rheumatism" who stated that their distress was worse in disagreeable weather; some even maintained that they could, with their aching joints, detect the coming storm before it broke. Is this so? How many patients with arthritis are weather prophets and how accurate are they in their forecasts? If they really do perceive the coming storm, how do they do it, and to what changes in the atmosphere are they sensitive? These questions would seem to merit the serious consideration of the medical profession. We should be curious not only on general principles but because if we could learn what conditions bring pain we might some day learn so to control the immediate environment as to keep these patients comfortable.

Naturally significant information cannot be secured until the reactions of one or more patients are recorded daily and correlated with the changes in the weather

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