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African American Lupus Foundation, Inc.

What Is Lupus?

 

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Lupus Links

Lupus Foundation of America
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WebMD:  Lupus Overview
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Mayo Clinic
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Women's Health.gov
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Living With Lupus
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Lupus Research Institute
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Lupus Alliance of America

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Lupus has many shades. It can affect people of different races, ethnicities, and ages, both men and women. It can look like different diseases. It's different for every person who has it. Lupus is an autoimmune disease. Ones body immune system is like an army with hundreds of soldiers. The immune system's job is to fight foreign substances in the body, like germs and viruses. In autoimmune diseases, the immune system is out of control. It attacks healthy tissues, not germs. It isn't cancer nor aids. Lupus is a disease that can affect many parts of the body. Everyone reacts differently. One person with Lupus may have swollen knees and fever. Another person may be tired all the time or have kidney trouble. Someone else may have rashes. Lupus can involve the joints, the skin, the kidney, the lungs, the heart and/or the brain

The three main types of lupus are:

(1). Systemic Lupus Erythematosus is the most common form. It's sometimes called SLE, or just lupus. The word "systemic" means that the disease can involve many parts of the body such as the heart, lungs, kidneys, and brain. SLE symptoms can be mild or serious.

(2). Discoid-Induced Lupus Erythematosus mainly affects the skin. A red rash may appear, or skin on the face, scalp, or elsewhere may change color.

(3). Drug-Induced Lupus is triggered by a few medicines. It's like SLE, but symptoms are usually milder. Most of the time, the disease goes away when the medicines are stopped. More men develop drug-induced lupus because the drugs that cause it hydralazine and procainamide, are used to treat heart conditions that are more common in men
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