Treatment of Lofgren's Syndrome

This page outlines the first-line treatment approach for Lofgren's syndrome, a condition presenting with painful skin lesions and joint pain.

The hallmark features driving treatment decisions are painful skin lesions and joint pain. Symptom control is the primary focus of initial management.

Initial management involves anti-inflammatory therapy. When this proves insufficient, corticosteroid treatment is indicated. The full regimen — including agent selection, dosing, and duration — is available in the complete structured protocol.

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References

It can be usually treated with only nonsteroidal drugs for painful skin lesions and joint pain; however, occasionally corticosteroids are required.

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