Objective: To investigate in an unselected, systemic sclerosis (SSc) cohort if baseline laser speckle contrast analysis (LASCA) peripheral blood perfusion (PBP) measurements differ between 'early' SSc (without skin involvement, or 'limited' SSc-LSSc) and 'clinically overt' SSc (with skin involvement, limited cutaneous SSc-LcSSc and diffuse cutaneous SSc-DcSSc) in routine setting.
Methods: A group of twenty consecutive 'early' SSc patients and forty consecutive 'clinically overt' SSc patients (twenty LcSSc and twenty DcSSc) underwent clinical and LASCA examinations (to assess the peripheral blood perfusion [PBP] of both hands volar).
Results: No statistically significant difference in adjusted PBP was found in the 'early' versus the 'clinically overt' group ( = 0.77) when adjusted for possible confounding factors (e.g., vasoactive medication, active smoking, history of DTL and disease duration). A wide variability was noted when observing the individual datapoints of each subset.
Conclusion: This study with an unselected SSc population in daily routine, non-research setting, showed there was no difference in adjusted PBP at baseline between 'early' SSc and 'clinically overt' SSc when corrected for possible confounding factors. Interestingly a wide variation of individual datapoints were observed in each subset, which emphasizes the heterogeneity of SSc.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10177938 | PMC |
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/diagnostics13091566 | DOI Listing |
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