High frequency skin ultrasonography in systemic sclerosis

Authors

  • Hassan Iffat
  • Jahangir Majid
  • Sajad Peerzada
Abstract:

Background: Systemic sclerosis is an autoimmune connective tissue disorder which is characterised by cutaneous and internal organ fibrosis. Raynaud’s phenomenon is the earliest feature and may precede the onset of the disease by months to years. The heart, lungs, gastrointestinal tract, kidneys and other organs may be involved. Our aim was to evaluate skin thickness and echogenicity in systemic sclerosis patients by ultrasound and compare it with the healthy age and sex matched controls. Method: Our study included 15 successively admitted patients (14 females and 1 male) with systemic sclerosis and 15 healthy age and sex matched controls. All the patients met the ACR criteria of diagnosis. The age range of the patients was 25-55 years. The disease duration ranged from 1-8 years. A complete history and physical examination was done for each patient. Skin thickness and echogenicity were measured by a 20MHz ultrasound probe at 6 different anatomical sites which was compared with that of the controls. Result: Skin thickness was more in systemic sclerosis patients (significant p value) as compared to controls, and echogenicity was inversely proportional to the skin thickness. Conclusion: Skin ultrasonography is a noninvasive method which can reflect the severity of skin involvement and periodic assessment of skin thickness and echogenicity can help to monitor the progression of the disease.

Upgrade to premium to download articles

Sign up to access the full text

Already have an account?login

similar resources

Longitudinal development of skin involvement and reliability of high frequency ultrasound in systemic sclerosis.

BACKGROUND Measurement of skin involvement is essential for diagnosis and prognosis in systemic sclerosis. Assessment by palpation skin score is the current method. OBJECTIVE To explore high frequency ultrasound as an objective method to improve skin characterisation by combining measurements of skin thickness and echogenicity. METHODS Skin thickness and echogenicity were measured at the pr...

full text

High frequency ultrasound of skin involvement in systemic sclerosis - a follow-up study.

INTRODUCTION High-frequency ultrasound offers a potential for objective and quantitative assessment of skin thickness and skin echogenicity in systemic sclerosis (SSc). Few studies have however assessed the longitudinal changes of skin involvement using ultrasound. The aim of the study was to investigate changes in skin thickness in early SSc using high frequency ultrasound during one year of f...

full text

Skin imaging in systemic sclerosis.

Fibrotic involvement of the skin is a cardinal feature of systemic sclerosis (SSc). The extent of skin involvement is associated with internal organ involvement, coinciding with more severe disease course and poor prognosis. A palpation-based semi-quantitative score, the modified Rodnan skin score, is widely used for the assessment of skin involvement, but it is entailed by significant limitati...

full text

High Rhodotorula sequences in skin transcriptome of patients with diffuse systemic sclerosis

Previous studies have suggested a role for pathogens as a trigger of systemic sclerosis (SSc), although neither a pathogen nor a mechanism of pathogenesis is known. Here we show enrichment of Rhodotorula sequences in the skin of patients with early, diffuse SSc compared with that in normal controls. RNA-seq was performed on four SSc patients and four controls, to a depth of 200 million reads pe...

full text

Study of the skin anatomy with high-frequency (22 MHz) ultrasonography and histological correlation*

The present essay is aimed at getting the radiologist familiar with the basic histological skin structure, allowing for a better correlation with sonographic findings. A high-frequency (22 MHz) ultrasonography apparatus was utilized in the present study. The histological analysis was performed after the skin specimens fixation with formalin, inclusion in paraffin blocks and subsequent staining ...

full text

L-selectin and Skin Damage in Systemic Sclerosis

BACKGROUND L-selectin ligands are induced on the endothelium of inflammatory sites. L-selectin expression on neutrophils and monocytes may mediate the primary adhesion of these cells at sites of inflammation by mediating the leukocyte-leukocyte interactions that facilitate their recruitment. L-selectin retains functional activity in its soluble form. Levels of soluble L-selectin have been repor...

full text

My Resources

Save resource for easier access later

Save to my library Already added to my library

{@ msg_add @}


Journal title

volume 15  issue 2

pages  47- 49

publication date 2012-07-01

By following a journal you will be notified via email when a new issue of this journal is published.

Hosted on Doprax cloud platform doprax.com

copyright © 2015-2023