Lupus is an autoimmune disease complex which generates a wide variety of symptoms. The symptoms produced by lupus can range from mild to severe and generally occur in the flames, form unpredictably aggravating or improve over time. Some of the common symptoms of lupus are: pronounced fatigue, pain and joint swelling, rash and fever. Although the butterfly rash is the characteristic most common rash of lupus, the disease can cause many other types of rashes located across several different body: the face, ears, scalp, neck, arms, shoulders, hands, chest and back.
The lupus patients often suffer from headaches, vertigo (dizziness), blurred vision, lack of concentration, the psychological conditions (depression) and sometimes convulsions and fainted. Over time, patients with lupus may have different sets of symptoms occurring in the flame and varying in intensity and duration.
When lupus affects the lymphatic system of the body, symptoms of lupus are the most common pain and swollen lymph nodes in the body. Most cases of lupus or affect the lymphatic system, the musculoskeletal system or skin. When lupus affects the musculoskeletal system, the most common symptoms are muscle pain, fatigue, swelling and stiffness of joints. When confined to the skin usually generates lupus rash, skin irritation and inflammation.
Lupus patients who also suffer from renal failure usually require strong medication to prevent the onset of serious complications.
In many cases, lupus affects the circulatory system of the body, cause inflammation of the blood vessels (vasculitis), anemia or leukopenia (decreased red and white blood cells). Lupus can also lead to the development of thrombocytopenia, a decrease in the number of blood platelets, a condition which interferes with the blood coagulation process, which increases the risk of bleeding.
When lupus affects the central nervous system, the most common symptoms are dizziness, headache, temporary memory loss (amnesia), impaired vision or neuropsychological problems (depression, changes in unpredictable behavior). Some of the above-mentioned symptoms are not only caused by lupus; often occur as a result of emotional stress and prolonged drug lupus. Lupus patients are also very likely to develop pneumonia. When the coronary level, lupus patients can suffer from coronary vasculitis (inflammation of the arteries that supply the heart), and endocarditis, myocarditis (inflammation of the heart itself), and pericarditis (inflammation of the protective membrane of the heart). If discovered in time, coronary level lupus implications can be effectively reversed with medical treatment.

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