类风湿性关节炎超快功率多普勒灌注成像变量与临床疾病活动之间的相关性:在诊断和治疗深度临床缓解期患者中的潜在应用。

IF 2.4 3区 医学 Q2 RADIOLOGY, NUCLEAR MEDICINE & MEDICAL IMAGING
Ultrasonography Pub Date : 2024-11-01 Epub Date: 2024-09-02 DOI:10.14366/usg.24095
Kuo-Lung Lai, Pai-Chi Li
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引用次数: 0

摘要

目的:本研究旨在评估超快功率多普勒(PD)评估类风湿性关节炎(RA)疾病活动性的能力,方法是检查超快PD灌注成像变量与疾病活动性临床指标之间的相关性:方法:33 名 RA 患者接受了疾病活动性临床评估,并使用超快和传统 PD 系统对双侧手腕进行了超声扫描。在超快PD成像中应用了空间奇异值分解滤波器。选择代表灌注和快速血流的奇异矢量来生成灌注图像。在计算机辅助下对所有图像进行定量分析,并由一名医生对滑膜血管进行半定量评分(0-3 分)。计算图像变量与临床指标之间的皮尔逊相关系数:超快 PD 变量与临床指标之间的相关系数从弱到强(r=0.221-0.374,均为 P<0.05)。滑膜PD亮度与基于C-反应蛋白的28关节疾病活动评分(DAS28-CRP)和简化疾病活动指数(SDAI)之间的相关性最强。在深度临床缓解(dCR)亚组患者中,滑膜透亮度与 DAS28-CRP、临床疾病活动指数和 SDAI 的相关性更强(r=0.578-0.641,均为 P<0.001)。传统 PD 变量与临床指数之间的相关系数与超快 PD 变量的相关系数相似:结论:超快PD成像能有效提取毛细血管血液信号并生成灌注图像。在 RA 患者中,超快 PD 变量与临床指标呈弱至中等程度的相关性,在 dCR 患者中,这种相关性明显更强。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Correlations between ultrafast power Doppler perfusion imaging variables and clinical disease activity in rheumatoid arthritis: potential applications for diagnosing and treating patients in deep clinical remission.

Purpose: This study aimed to evaluate the ability of ultrafast power Doppler (PD) to assess disease activity in rheumatoid arthritis (RA) by examining the correlations between variables from ultrafast PD perfusion imaging and clinical measures of disease activity.

Methods: Thirty-three RA patients underwent clinical assessments of disease activity and ultrasound scans of bilateral wrists using both ultrafast and conventional PD systems. A spatial singular value decomposition filter was applied to the ultrafast PD imaging. Singular vectors representing perfusion and fast flows were selected to produce perfusion images. All images were quantitatively analyzed with computer assistance and scored semiquantitatively (0-3) by a physician for synovial vascularity. The Pearson correlation coefficients between image variables and clinical indices were calculated.

Results: The correlation coefficients ranged from weakly to moderately positive between ultrafast PD variables and clinical indices (r=0.221-0.374, all P<0.05). The strongest correlations were observed for synovial PD brightness with the 28-joint Disease Activity Score based on C-Reactive Protein (DAS28-CRP) and the Simplified Disease Activity Index (SDAI). In patients within the deep clinical remission (dCR) subgroup, synovial PD brightness showed stronger correlations with DAS28-CRP, the Clinical Disease Activity Index, and SDAI (r=0.578-0.641, all P<0.001). The correlation coefficients between conventional PD variables and clinical indices were similar to those observed with ultrafast PD variables.

Conclusion: Ultrafast PD imaging effectively extracts capillary blood signals and generates perfusion images. In the RA population, ultrafast PD variables exhibit weak-to-moderate correlations with clinical indices, with these correlations being notably stronger in dCR patients.

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来源期刊
Ultrasonography
Ultrasonography Medicine-Radiology, Nuclear Medicine and Imaging
CiteScore
5.10
自引率
6.50%
发文量
78
审稿时长
15 weeks
期刊介绍: Ultrasonography, the official English-language journal of the Korean Society of Ultrasound in Medicine (KSUM), is an international peer-reviewed academic journal dedicated to practice, research, technology, and education dealing with medical ultrasound. It is renamed from the Journal of Korean Society of Ultrasound in Medicine in January 2014, and published four times per year: January 1, April 1, July 1, and October 1. Original articles, technical notes, topical reviews, perspectives, pictorial essays, and timely editorial materials are published in Ultrasonography covering state-of-the-art content. Ultrasonography aims to provide updated information on new diagnostic concepts and technical developments, including experimental animal studies using new equipment in addition to well-designed reviews of contemporary issues in patient care. Along with running KSUM Open, the annual international congress of KSUM, Ultrasonography also serves as a medium for cooperation among physicians and specialists from around the world who are focusing on various ultrasound technology and disease problems and relevant basic science.
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