Impaired microcirculation is one of the leading factors in local and general pathogenesis of SSc. Widefield nail-fold video-capillaroscopy (NFVC) stands as the most informative and at the same time simple… Click to show full abstract
Impaired microcirculation is one of the leading factors in local and general pathogenesis of SSc. Widefield nail-fold video-capillaroscopy (NFVC) stands as the most informative and at the same time simple method used for evaluation of capillary circulation.To identify characteristic and specific for SSc– PM/DM capillaroscopic features.Both hand II – V fingers of 68 pts with SSc-PM/DM were subjected to widefield NFC, evaluated using a binocular 20x magnification Olympus microscope and analyzed in view of specific skin lesions discriminating diffuse and limited SSc forms.SSc-specific dilatations of capillary loops were the most common for SSc-PM/DM and were found in all pts; 50% of them had signs of active scleroderma pattern, such as capillary loss or “avascular areas” (50%) and hemorrhages (51.5%), associated with generalized microvascular spasm in early disease and capillary sclerosis in advanced disease. The morphological capillary abnormalities such as varying degrees of capillary loops tortuosity/vascular inhomogeneity were present in 63% of examined nailfolds, branching bushy behavior of capillary loops and mega-capillaries predominated; architectural disorientation/disarrangement of capillary loops with formation of subcutaneous plexus was seen in more than 50% of them. Capillaroscopic changes consistent with active scleroderma pattern were present in 54 % and were associated with lab signs of inflammatory muscle syndrome and immunological disorders: giant capillaries (p<0.02), disorientation of capillary loops (p<0.02) and ramified/bushy capillaries (p<0.04) were significantly more frequent in patients with severe muscle syndrome, increased CPK, ANF -positivity and hemorrhages (p<0.03).Thus, widefield NFVC revealed a “mixed” nature of capillaroscopic changes, combining features specific for SSc (capillary dilation, avascular areas, hemorrhages) and for PM/DM (bushy and giant capillaries, disorientation of capillary loops of the nailfold with formation of subcutaneous plexuses.)None declared
               
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