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Dive into the research topics where Oscar Rillo is active.

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Featured researches published by Oscar Rillo.


Jcr-journal of Clinical Rheumatology | 2006

Peripheral musculoskeletal manifestations in polymyalgia rheumatica.

Federico Ceccato; Susana Roverano; S. Papasidero; Alejandra Barrionuevo; Oscar Rillo; Sergio Paira

Objectives:The objectives of this study were to evaluate the frequency and characteristics of the peripheral musculoskeletal manifestations in polymyalgia rheumatica (PMR), evaluate if PMR with peripheral synovitis represents a subset with a more severe disease, and examine for clinical and laboratory characteristics at onset of PMR that might later predict rheumatoid arthritis (RA). Patients and Methods:Patients were diagnosed with PMR according to the 1982 Chuang criteria. Patients were followed up between 1990 and 2002. The following musculoskeletal manifestations at onset and during the follow up were considered: peripheral synovitis, distal extremity swelling with pitting edema, carpal tunnel syndrome, and distal tenosynovitis. Results:Thirty-eight of the 74 patients (51%) showed distal musculoskeletal symptoms: 29 (39%) had peripheral synovitis, 4 (5%) presented pitting edema, 4 (5%) experienced carpal tunnel syndrome, and one (1.3%) had distal tenosynovitis. These manifestations resolved completely after corticosteroid therapy was initiated. Peripheral synovitis was oligoarticular and often transient. The joints most frequently involved were the wrist, metacarpophalangeal, and knee. Erythrocyte sedimentation rate (ESR) was normal in 7 patients. When comparing patients with PMR with and without peripheral synovitis, no statistically significant differences were found in the studied variables. Through the first year of follow up, 7 patients fulfilled the American College of Rheumatology 1987 criteria for RA, 2 patients developed giant cell arteritis, and 3 had associated malignancy. Patients who developed RA had statistically significantly increased presence of persistent synovitis and a smaller decrease in mean ESR after treatment with corticosteroids. Conclusion:Fifty-one percent of the patients with PMR presented distal musculoskeletal manifestations, with peripheral synovitis being the most frequent one. Patients with PMR with peripheral synovitis did not represent a high-risk subgroup with more severe disease. Seven patients who developed criteria for seronegative RA within the first year of follow up had presented statistically significant persistent synovitis compared with those who continued as PMR and also showed a smaller initial decrease in mean ESR after steroid treatment was initiated. The absence of persistent arthritis and the benign course of the arthritis permit the distinction of PMR from other inflammatory arthropathies.


Jcr-journal of Clinical Rheumatology | 2010

The Prevalence of Rheumatoid Arthritis in Argentina: A Capture-Recapture Study in a City of Buenos Aires Province

Dario Scublinsky; Horacio Venarotti; Gustavo Citera; Osvaldo D. Messina; Eduardo Scheines; Oscar Rillo; Alfredo Arturi; Julio Hofman; Luis Fernando Somma; Gustavo Casado; Rubén Iannantuono; Claudio Gonzalez

Objective:The objective of this study was to assess the prevalence of rheumatoid arthritis (RA) in the population of a city of 70,000 inhabitants located in Buenos Aires, Argentina. Methods:Based on the hypothesis that RA is an underdiagnosed disease in Argentina, a capture-recapture method was applied. A local registry of RA patients of Luján City was taken as the primary source; a telephone survey was specifically carried out as a secondary source of information. Patients suspected of having RA were referred to a local hospital to be examined by a team of 12 rheumatologists. Anamnesis and physical examination were followed by hand and foot radiography and erythrocyte sedimentation rate and rheumatoid factor measurements. Results:According to the American College of Rheumatology criteria, a prevalence rate of 0.94% (95% confidence interval [CI], 0.86%-1.02%) was found in the surveyed population; in agreement with other studies, this prevalence was higher in women when compared with men (for female, 1.54% [95% CI, 1.40%-1.69%]; for male, 0.40% [95% CI, 0.32%-0.49%]). Conclusion:The prevalence of RA in a representative sample of the population of a city from the central region of Argentina seems to be close to 1%.


Clinical Rheumatology | 1994

Idiopathic osteoporosis during pregnancy

Oscar Rillo; C. A. Di Stefano; J. Bermudez; J. A. Maldonado Cocco

SummaryAmong the idiopathic forms of osteoporosis, the one developing during pregnancy is the least common and scarcely studied. Poorly understood, it seems to stem from transient failure of calcitropic hormones and decreased osteoblast activity. A 25-year-old patient presented with coxofemoral pain during the last three months of pregnancy, followed by multiple vertebral compression fractures at postpartum. Laboratory, radiological, densitometric and histological examinations led to a diagnosis of idiopathic osteoporosis in pregnancy, once other causes of osteopenia had been ruled out. Bone densitometries performed 12 and 24 months later showed an increase in mineral density, thus demonstrating the self-limited nature of this entity.


The Journal of Rheumatology | 2012

Comparison of the Clinical Expression of Patients with Ankylosing Spondylitis from Europe and Latin America

Mariana Benegas; Elisa Muñoz-Gomariz; Pilar Font; Ruben Burgos-Vargas; José Chaves; Daniel Palleiro; José Maldonado Cocco; Miguel A. Gutierrez; Ricardo Sáenz; Ivan Steckmen; Oscar Rillo; Juan Mulero; Percival Sampaio-Barros; A. Barcelos; Bert Vander Cruyssen; Janitzia Vázquez-Mellado; Eduardo Collantes Estévez

Objective. To compare the clinical, demographic, and serologic characteristics and the treatment of patients diagnosed with ankylosing spondylitis (AS) from Europe (EU) and Latin America (LA). Methods. We included 3439 patients from national registries: the Spanish Registry of Spondyloarthritis (REGISPONSER), the Belgian registry (ASPECT), and the Latin American Registry of Spondyloarthropathies (RESPONDIA). We selected patients with diagnosis of AS who met the modified New York classification criteria. Demographic, clinical, disease activity, functional, and metrological measurement data were recorded. Current treatment was recorded. The population was classified into 2 groups: patients with disease duration < 10 years and those with disease duration ≥ 10 years. A descriptive and comparative analysis of variables of both groups was carried out. Results. There were 2356 patients in EU group and 1083 in LA group. Prevalence of HLA-B27 was 71% in LA group and 83% in EU group (p < 0.001). We found a greater frequency of peripheral arthritis and enthesitis (p < 0.001) in the LA population; prevalence of arthritis was 57% in LA and 42% in EU, and for enthesitis, 54% and 38%. Except for treatment with anti-tumor necrosis factor (anti-TNF), the use of nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drugs (NSAID), corticosteroids, and disease-modifying antirheumatic drugs (DMARD), and the association of anti-TNF and methotrexate use showed a significant difference (p < 0.001) in the 2 populations. Conclusion. The principal differences in the clinical manifestations of patients with AS from EU and LA were the greater frequency of peripheral arthritis and enthesitis in LA group, the higher percentage of HLA-B27 in EU group, and the form of treatment, with a greater use of NSAID, steroids, and DMARD in the LA group.


Rheumatology | 2011

General characteristics of an early arthritis cohort in Argentina

Josefina Marcos; Christian A. Waimann; Fernando Dal Pra; Jimena Hogrefe; Soledad Retamozo; Francisco Caeiro; Luciana Casalla; Mariana Benegas; Oscar Rillo; Alberto Spindler; H Berman; Berman A; A. Secco; Rodrigo Nicolás García Salinas; Antonio Catalán Pellet; Federico Ceccato; Sergio Paira; Juan Carlos Marcos; José Antonio Maldonado Cocco; Gustavo Citera

OBJECTIVE The aim of the present study is to describe the general characteristics of a cohort of patients with early arthritis in Argentina. METHODS CONAART (Consorcio Argentino de Artritis Temprana--Argentine Consortium for Early Arthritis) is an initiative of seven rheumatology centres across Argentina. Patients were included if they had at least one or more swollen joints and <2 years of disease duration. Social, demographic, familiar, hereditary, clinical and laboratory data were recollected. At first visit and every year, X-rays of hands and feet were performed and working characteristics and pharmaco-economic data were re-collected. RESULTS A total of 413 patients were included. Of them, 327 (79.2%) were women with a median age of 49 years and a median disease duration of 6 months. Of the total, 183 (44.3%) had RA (ACR 1987) and 167 (40.4%) undifferentiated arthritis (UA). Other diagnoses included: 12 crystalics, 11 PsA, 6 uSpA, 6 other CTD, 1 AS and 27 other diagnosis. As 85% of our population had RA and UA, we only compared these two groups of patients. Patients with RA had significantly worse activity parameters of the disease (DAS of 28 joints), functional capacity (HAQ) and quality of life (Rheumatoid Arthritis Quality of Life) than patients with UA. The frequency of RF and anti-CCP, and symmetrical distribution were also significantly higher in patients with RA compared with UA patients. All patients with RA initiated early specific treatment, in a period no longer than 6 months from the beginning of the disease. CONCLUSION Early arthritis clinics are a useful tool to identify and treat patients with different forms of joint involvement.


The American Journal of the Medical Sciences | 2011

Epidemiology of Spondyloarthritis in Argentina

Emilio Buschiazzo; José A. Maldonado-Cocco; Pablo Arturi; Gustavo Citera; Berman A; Alejandro Nitsche; Oscar Rillo

Introduction:Spondyloarthritis (SpA) includes a group of diseases that share immunogenetic, clinical and radiologic findings, with a particular involvement of the axial skeleton and the entheses. Methods:SpA patients attending ambulatory care in 11 rheumatology services located in 6 Argentine provinces were included in a prospective, observational multicentre cohort of SpA in Argentina (Iberoamerican Spondyloarthritis Registry [RESPONDIA]). Data collected were transmitted online and stored in the Spanish spondyloarthritis registry (REGISPONSER) Web site. Sociodemographic, clinical features and diagnosis, disease activity, functional status, quality of life, work status, radiographic changes and treatment data were collected by means of validated tools. Results:A total of 402 patients were included; 59% were male, with median age of 48.3 years and median disease duration of 8 years; 68.7% of patients belonged to middle and lower-middle social classes. Eighty-six patients were diagnosed with ankylosing spondylitis (AS), 242 with psoriatic arthritis, 25 with reactive arthritis, 10 with SpA associated with inflammatory bowel disease, 33 with undifferentiated SpA and 6 with juvenile AS. The median score was 2.6 for the Bath AS Functional Index, 3.8 for the Bath AS Disease Activity Index and 5 for the Bath AS Radiology Index. The lower social class patients achieved a worse Bath AS Functional Index than other social classes and a worse Bath AS Disease Activity Index, compared with upper-middle class. Conclusions:The sociodemographic distribution pattern observed in these SpA patients was similar to that expected in the general population of Argentina, with worse functional capacity and higher disease activity observed in the lower social classes.


Clinical Rheumatology | 1989

Coexistence of diffuse idiopathic skeletal hyperostosis and ankylosing spondylitis

Oscar Rillo; E. J. Scheines; C. Moreno; Juan Carlos Barreira; A. A. Porrini; J. A. Maldonado Cocco

SummaryTo the best of our knowledge, only two patients with concurrent diffuse idiopathic skeletal hyperostosis (DISH) and ankylosing spondylitis (AS) have been reported so far. Here we present 3 patients in whom clinical and radiological findings indicative of DISH and AS coexisted. Two of these cases exhibited HLA B27. Although the presence of sacroiliitis would appear to exclude DISH, calcification and ossification of the anterior common vertebral ligament (ACVL) confirmed diagnosis of the latter disease.


Clinical Rheumatology | 2005

Cytidine deaminase in polymyalgia rheumatica and elderly onset rheumatoid arthritis

Sergio Paira; Susana Roverano; Oscar Rillo; Alejandra Barrionuevo; Stella Mahieu; Néstor Millen

Serum cytidine deaminase (CD) as a marker of inflammatory disease was assessed in 44 patients and 47 controls to differentiate polymyalgia rheumatica (PMR) from elderly onset rheumatoid arthritis (EORA). The patients were divided into four groups: PMR with and without synovitis and seropositive and seronegative EORA. No statistically significant differences were found when serum CD levels of seropositive EORA patients were compared with serum CD of PMR patients without synovitis, neither when serum CD levels of all PMR patients were compared with a seronegative EORA group, nor when serum CD levels of PMR patients with synovitis were compared with those with EORA. Nevertheless, statistically significant differences were detected between EORA’s serum CD levels and the control group (p=0.023). This difference was 10% when comparing CD levels of PMR patients with the control group (p=0.070). We did not demonstrate that serum CD levels could be a useful tool to differentiate PMR from EORA, but these findings could nevertheless reflect the presence of an inflammatory disease.


Jcr-journal of Clinical Rheumatology | 2016

PANLAR Consensus Recommendations for the Management in Osteoarthritis of Hand, Hip, and Knee.

Oscar Rillo; Humberto Riera; Carlota Acosta; Verónica Liendo; Joyce Bolanos; Ligia Monterola; Edgar Nieto; Rodolfo Arape; Luisa M. Franco; Mariflor Vera; S. Papasidero; Rolando Espinosa; Jorge Esquivel; Renee Souto; Cesar Rossi; José Fernando Molina; José A. Salas; Francisco J. Ballesteros; Francisco Radrigan; Marlene Guibert; Gil Reyes; Araceli Chico; Walter Camacho; Lorena Urioste; Abraham Garcia; Isa Iraheta; Carmen Gutierrez; Raúl Aragón; Margarita Duarte; Margarita Gonzalez

ObjectiveThe objective of this consensus is to update the recommendations for the treatment of hand, hip, and knee osteoarthritis (OA) by agreeing on key propositions relating to the management of hand, hip, and knee OA, by identifying and critically appraising research evidence for the effectiveness of the treatments and by generating recommendations based on a combination of the available evidence and expert opinion of 18 countries of America. MethodsRecommendations were developed by a group of 48 specialists of rheumatologists, members of other medical disciplines (orthopedics and physiatrists), and three patients, one for each location of OA. A systematic review of existing articles, meta-analyses, and guidelines for the management of hand, hip, and knee OA published between 2008 and January 2014 was undertaken. The scores for Level of Evidence and Grade of Recommendation were proposed and fully consented within the committee based on The American Heart Association Evidence-Based Scoring System. The level of agreement was established through a variation of Delphi technique. ResultsBoth “strong” and “conditional” recommendations are given for management of hand, hip, and knee OA and nonpharmacological, pharmacological, and surgical modalities of treatment are presented according to the different levels of agreement. ConclusionsThese recommendations are based on the consensus of clinical experts from a wide range of disciplines taking available evidence into account while balancing the benefits and risks of nonpharmacological, pharmacological, and surgical treatment modalities, and incorporating their preferences and values. Different backgrounds in terms of patient education or drug availability in different countries were not evaluated but will be important.


Clinical Rheumatology | 2012

Retraction Note: Quality of life of patients with rheumatoid arthritis in Argentina: reliability, validity, and sensitivity to change of a Spanish version of the Rheumatoid Arthritis Quality of Life questionnaire

Christian A. Waimann; Fernando Dal Pra; María Florencia Marengo; Emilce Edith Schneeberger; Susana Gagliardi; José Antonio Maldonado Cocco; Mónica Sanchez; A. Garone; Rafael Chaparro del Moral; Oscar Rillo; Mariana Salcedo; Javier Rosa; F Ceballos; Enrique R. Soriano; Gustavo Citera

The Rheumatoid Arthritis Quality of Life (RAQoL) questionnaire is the first needs-based instrument specifically designed to measure quality of life (QoL) of patients with rheumatoid arthritis (RA). The aims of our study were to develop an Argentinean version of the RAQoL and to determine its reproducibility, validity, and sensitivity to change in patients with RA. Translation process was performed according to internationally accepted methodology. Internal consistency and test–retest reliability were calculated. Criterion and construct validity were assessed by comparing the RAQoL with parameters of disease activity, the Health Assessment Questionnaire (HAQ), and the Medical Outcomes Study 36-item health survey (SF-36) questionnaire. Sensitivity to change was measured at 6–12 months using standardized response mean (SRM). The minimal important change was defined as a change of 1 or 1.96 times the standard error of measurement. A total of 97 patients with RA were included. Cronbach’s α was 0.93, and test–retest reliability was 0.95. The RAQoL showed moderate to strong correlation with parameters of disease activity, the HAQ, and the SF-36. Functional status was the main determinant of patients’ level of QoL. The SRM of the RAQoL was 0.24. Agreement between 20 % improvement in RAQoL and ACR20 response was moderate. Minimal important change was 2.2 (1 SEM) or 4.3 (1.96 SEM). The Argentinean version of the RAQoL is the first Spanish translation of this questionnaire. Our findings show it to be valid, reliable, and sensitive to changes in RA clinical status.

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Sergio Paira

Hospital General de México

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Gustavo Citera

University of Buenos Aires

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A. Secco

University of Buenos Aires

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Alberto Spindler

University of Buenos Aires

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Enrique R. Soriano

Hospital Italiano de Buenos Aires

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Alberto Berman

University of South Florida

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