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Marite Rygg

Researcher at Norwegian University of Science and Technology

Publications -  85
Citations -  2402

Marite Rygg is an academic researcher from Norwegian University of Science and Technology. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Arthritis. The author has an hindex of 23, co-authored 74 publications receiving 1821 citations. Previous affiliations of Marite Rygg include University of Saskatchewan & Nord-Trøndelag Hospital Trust.

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Journal Article

Incidence of juvenile idiopathic arthritis in the Nordic countries. A population based study with special reference to the validity of the ILAR and EULAR criteria

TL;DR: In this paper, a longitudinal, prospective, population based study with patients enrolled according to the ILAR and EULAR criteria was conducted to find the incidence of juvenile arthritis within defined areas in the Nordic countries.
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Chronic idiopathic pain in adolescence--high prevalence and disability: the young HUNT Study 2008

TL;DR: Chronic idiopathic pain is common among adolescents, and those suffering from it report a major impact on several areas of daily living, as shown by high disability in adolescents with musculoskeletal pain in 3 or more locations.
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Distinct interferon signatures and cytokine patterns define additional systemic autoinflammatory diseases

Adriana Almeida de Jesus, +86 more
TL;DR: The IRG-S expands the diagnostic armamentarium in evaluating USAIDs and points to different pathways regulating IRG expression as well as 3 additional autoinflammatory diseases: IL-18-mediated PAP and recurrent MAS, NEMO∆5-associated autoinflammatory syndrome (NEMO-NDAS), and SAMD9L- associated autoinflammatory disease (SAMD 9L-SAAD).
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Phenotypic variability and disparities in treatment and outcomes of childhood arthritis throughout the world: an observational cohort study.

Alessandro Consolaro, +143 more
TL;DR: The greater disease burden in lower-resource settings highlights the need for public health efforts aimed at improving equity in access to effective treatments and care for juvenile idiopathic arthritis.