Color Doppler Ultrasound Assessment of Subclinical Activity With Scoring of Morphea
Background Detection of activity in morphea is paramount for adequately managing the disease. Subclinical ultrasound involvement on inactive lesions or healthy skin areas adjacent to morphea has not been described to date. Objectives The study aimed to detect morphea’s subclinical activity by Color...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of cutaneous medicine and surgery 2023-09, Vol.27 (5), p.454-460 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Background
Detection of activity in morphea is paramount for adequately managing the disease. Subclinical ultrasound involvement on inactive lesions or healthy skin areas adjacent to morphea has not been described to date.
Objectives
The study aimed to detect morphea’s subclinical activity by Color Doppler ultrasound not identified with the clinical scorings.
Materials & Methods
This cross-sectional retrospective study was done from January 2014 to July 2019 in patients with a clinicopathological diagnosis of morphea. The modified Localized Scleroderma Skin Severity Index (mLoSSI) and The Ultrasound Morphea Activity Score (US-MAS) were used to correlate clinical and subclinical activity.
Results
A total of 36 patients met the inclusion criteria. 54% of cases presented subclinical activity in areas adjacent to the clinically active lesion, 23% in nonadjacent regions, and 23% demonstrated activity at a clinically inactive lesion site.
100% of patients with morphea “en coup de sabre” involving the frontal region of the face concomitantly presented both subclinical activities of morphea on the frontal facial region and the scalp following the same axis.
A positive relationship was observed between the degree of clinical activity measured by mLoSSI and US-MAS scoring.
The main limitations of our study were the low number of patients and the inability to detect alterations < 0.1 mm.
Conclusions
Subclinical activity is frequent in morphea, can extend beyond the lesional areas, including apparently noninvolved adjacent and distant corporal regions, and can be detected by color Doppler ultrasound. |
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ISSN: | 1203-4754 1615-7109 |
DOI: | 10.1177/12034754231191474 |