What are the symptoms of adult Still’s disease?

The common symptoms of adult Still’s disease are fever, rash and joint muscle symptoms.
1. Fever: most patients have flaccid fever, with body temperature above 39℃ and fluctuating above 2℃ within a day. Fever lasts for 1~2 weeks and then subsides on its own. After the fever subsides, the patient is like a normal person, and the fever recurs after an interval of 1 week to several weeks. It may be accompanied by systemic symptoms such as chills, fatigue and cold.
2. Rash: almost all patients will have a rash during the whole course of the disease, which can be transient, transient, and dissipate as the fever subsides. The appearance of the rash is often a precursor to fever. Characterized by recurrent, polymorphic and variable, it is distributed on the trunk and limbs, and can also be seen on the face, and often leaves no traces or occasional slight hyperpigmentation after fading.
3. Joint and muscle symptoms: the vast majority of patients have arthralgia, mainly involving large joints, such as knees, elbows, wrists, ankles, hip joints, etc., manifested as joint pressure, pain, swelling is light and less. Most patients have muscle pain.
Adult patients with Still’s disease should go to the rheumatology and immunology department of regular hospitals as soon as possible, and give targeted treatment after clarifying the cause.