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Diagnosis

To determine whether you have lupus, your physician will run a battery of tests and make a diagnosis. From that diagnosis, the doctor will determine your lupus type, its severity, and a course of action to treat the disease.
Diagnosing Lupus
Diagnosing lupus can be tricky, as symptoms of the disease can be mild or severe, come in a wide variety, and mimic those of other diseases. But there are telltale signs that a doctor can use when suspecting the disease, and more complex methodologies to determine if a patient has lupus.
Is it Lupus? What You Can Look For
Since diagnosing lupus can be a difficult task, even for healthcare professionals, it is important to know when typical signs and symptoms add up and point toward lupus as the cause. Here you’ll find the usual suspects when it comes to symptoms – and questions to ask yourself to help determine if you could be a lupus candidate.
Lupus Diagnosis: Anti-Nuclear Antibody (ANA) Test
One of the most common tests used by physicians to help diagnose lupus is the anti-nuclear antibody (ANA) blood test.
Lupus Diagnosis – Autoantibodies
One of the most common tests used by physicians to help diagnose lupus are blood tests to uncover autoantibodies like anti-DNA, anti-SM, and anti-RNP.

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