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Not Just Growing Pains

Not Just Growing Pains
Reported January 17, 2005

NEW YORK (Ivanhoe Broadcast News) — Nearly 300,000 children in the United States suffer from joint diseases. These diseases often go undetected because doctors dismiss them as growing pains. But there are signs parents can watch for to prevent a misdiagnosis.

On the outside, Bryan Presutti looks like your average 10-year-old. He plays little league ball and races four wheelers. But on the inside, Bryan is different. His body tires fast, and his joints often ache. Bryan has spondyloarthropathy — a common arthritic disease.

“I can’t do normal stuff that other people can do, like run, play baseball and stuff like that for a long period of time,” Bryan says. His parents first noticed a problem when he was just 3 years old.

Jay Presutti, Bryan’s dad, says, “It was about three o’clock in the morning, and we heard scuffling across the floor, and it was Bryan sliding himself across the floor to the bathroom, and he says he couldn’t walk.”

For six years, Bryan was misdiagnosed, with everything from leukemia to normal aches and pains.

“It’s very common for children who have real arthritis and a more serious condition to initially have been dismissed by inexperienced physicians as simply having growing pains,” says Thomas J. A. Lehman, M.D., a rheumatologist at Hospital for Special Surgery in New York.

Dr. Lehman says parents should look for specific symptoms to make sure it is just growing pains. He says, “Parents need to know that growing pains are something that occurs usually just as the child is going to sleep at night or in the middle of the night, and that child is absolutely fine when they wake up in the morning.”

But if your child experiences morning stiffness or pain in the daytime, it could be something much more serious that Dr. Lehman says warrants a medical evaluation. Which is what Bryan finally got. And now, with the right treatments, he and his family can go on with their lives.

Dr. Lehman says if you suspect your child’s complaints are being ignored, keep searching for a doctor who will listen to your concerns

If you would like more information, please contact:

Ian Singh
Office of Thomas Lehman, M.D.
Hospital for Special Surgeries
535 East 70th Street
New York, NY 10021
(212) 606-1151

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