Close X
Friday, November 22, 2024
ADVT 
Health & Fitness

A Hard Disease with a Harder Name

Darpan News Desk, 10 Jun, 2016 11:17 AM
  • A Hard Disease with a Harder Name
The word itself is like a tongue twister. It is hard to say. But scleroderma is an even harder disease, a rare disorder that sees its patients fighting not only the devastating effects of their skin hardening, but also a stigma that comes with a general lack of awareness of scleroderma and its symptoms. It affects thousands of people, but millions don’t know anything about it.
 
“With no known cause or cure, scleroderma is a disease that doesn’t discriminate,” says Maureen Sauvé, a scleroderma patient and past president of the Scleroderma Society of Canada. “It can strike at men and women, young and old, any ethnicity. But we shouldn’t have to suffer alone. We are not our disease.”
 
Scleroderma is an autoimmune disease that causes the body to produce too much collagen, which in turn causes patches of skin to harden. Symptoms are both visible and invisible, attacking any organ in the body, and they make every day life extremely difficult.
 
As a rare disease, research into better therapies — and, ultimately, a cure — is vital. But resources are thin. Over the course of the month of June, Scleroderma Awareness Month, several communities across Canada are hosting fundraising and awareness events to raise money for research and educate about scleroderma and its devastating effects.
 
“The science is getting better and our understanding of scleroderma is improving,” says Maureen. “But we still have a long way to go. We are better treating the symptoms, and our capacity to support people living with the disease is rapidly improving. We can continue this progress by building awareness and support.”
 
Find the scleroderma event closest to your community by visiting the events page at scleroderma.ca. More resources are also available at hardword.org.

MORE Health & Fitness ARTICLES

House not clean as we think: Study

House not clean as we think: Study
Most people pride themselves on trying to keep their house clean and tidy. But a new research suggests our houses are not as tidy as we think....

House not clean as we think: Study

Chocolates keep you healthy, happy

Chocolates keep you healthy, happy
It's a well known fact that too much consumption of sugar is bad for health. But a little bit of sugar in moderation isn't as terrible as one thought, say researchers....

Chocolates keep you healthy, happy

Workers sacrificing sleep for long hours: Study

Workers sacrificing sleep for long hours: Study
A study has suggested that people are exchanging paid work with their sleeping time and a chronic sleep loss can be prevented with flexible working hours....

Workers sacrificing sleep for long hours: Study

'Increase in mindfulness will not make you slim'

'Increase in mindfulness will not make you slim'
Contrary to popular perception, increase in mindfulness - monitoring food intake, increasing physical activity and avoiding stress eating - may...

'Increase in mindfulness will not make you slim'

College students unaware about hookah risks: Study

College students unaware about hookah risks: Study
College students consider hookah smoking safer than smoking cigarettes as they lack awareness about the risks associated with the former, says a US-based study....

College students unaware about hookah risks: Study

Long sperm swim faster, fertilise more eggs

Long sperm swim faster, fertilise more eggs
Even when short sperm is given a head-start, long sperm wins the competition comfortably by fertilising more eggs, a study has observed....

Long sperm swim faster, fertilise more eggs