Lupus
Lupus typically occurs when the body’s immune system attacks its organs and tissues, making it an autoimmune disease. The inflammation it causes may affect various body systems, from the joints, kidneys, and skin to the lungs, heart, brain, and blood cells. It’s a condition that’s not easy to diagnose accurately because many of the symptoms mimic the signs of other diseases. Even its most distinctive indicator, facial rashes resembling butterfly wings that unfold across the cheeks, happens in the majority but not every case. Some may tend to develop the condition due to genetics, which may be triggered by drugs, sunlight, or infections.
While no cure exists for lupus, various treatments are available to manage the symptoms. These symptoms may include fatigue, fever, joint pain, skin lesions, breathlessness, chest pain, dry eyes, confusion, memory loss, and headaches. Moreover, it’s also a condition usually tested for when trying to diagnose fibromyalgia, and it can also be the cause or be in concurrence with the disease.