Quick Facts About Lupus
While lupus is not well known or understood, it is far more common than better known diseases such as leukemia and multiple sclerosis. Without early diagnosis and treatment, lupus can be severely debilitating or deadly. Here are a few quick facts about lupus:
- Approximately 1.5 – 2 million Americans are afflicted by lupus, while more than 5 million people are known to be affected worldwide.
- Symptoms include fever, fatigue, loss of appetite, rashes, hair loss, swollen glands, sensitivity to light, chest, muscle and joint pain, ulcers in the mouth or nose, and others.
- It has been 40 years since any major new treatments have been approved for this devastating disease.
- Ninety percent of those afflicted are women and 80% are between the ages of 15 and 45.
- People of color are two to three times more likely to develop lupus.
- Lupus can lead to organ damage and failure if left untreated; serious conditions that arise include kidney disease, pancreatitis, pleurisy, vasculitis, pericarditis, and cancer.
- Lupus affects 1 out of every 185 Americans.
- Lupus is one of America’s least recognized major diseases. While Lupus is widespread, awareness and accurate knowledge about it lags decades behind many other illnesses.
- Living with lupus and its symptoms is possible, but doing so relies heavily on early diagnosis and consistent treatment.
- More than 16,000 Americans are diagnosed with lupus each year.
- Lupus is a widespread and chronic autoimmune disease that, for unknown reasons, causes the immune system to attack the body’s own tissues and organs, including the joints, kidneys, heart, lungs, brain, blood, and skin.
- Lupus is more common than leukemia, multiple sclerosis, cystic fibrosis and muscular dystrophy combined.
- There are many treatments for lupus’s symptoms, but there is no cure yet!