Luyao Zhou's scientific contributions

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Publications (1)


Fig. 1 Ultrasonic examination and measurement. a The ultrasonic probe was placed vertically without exerting pressure or direct skin contact. b Measurement map of skin layer thickness on the right thigh. c Vascular index (VI) measurement image of microvascular blood flow in the skin layer for normal skin on the left forehead. d The manually measured pixel value in the region of interest (ROI) was 10462, and the VI was 0.5%
Demographic and clinical characteristics of participants
LoSAI and total scores of 23 juvenile localised scleroderma active lesions
Superb microvascular imaging for evaluating the activity of juvenile localised scleroderma: a preliminary study
  • Article
  • Full-text available

April 2024

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13 Reads

European Radiology

Xiaoyi Chen

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Luyao Zhou

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Yu Xia

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[...]

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Na Xu

Objectives To investigate microvascular changes in juvenile localised scleroderma (JLS) lesions using superb microvascular imaging (SMI) and assess SMI’s utility in evaluating disease activity. Methods This prospective study enroled 16 children (7 males) with pathologically diagnosed JLS between January 2021 and June 2023. Lesions were assessed using Localised Scleroderma Cutaneous Assessment Tools, including the localised scleroderma skin activity index (LoSAI) and localised scleroderma skin damage index (LoSDI). Lesions with LoSAI scores > 0 were classified as active. The thickness and blood flow of the lesions and healthy skin layers of the contralateral site were evaluated using ultrasound. SMI was used to detect microvascular blood flow in the lesions and healthy skin, and the vascular index (VI) was calculated. The difference in VI between active lesions and healthy skin was correlated with LoSAI and total scores. Results Of 46 lesions, 23 were active and 23 inactive. The skin thickness of the lesion was 0.094 ± 0.024 cm, and that of the healthy site was 0.108 ± 0.026 cm ( p < 0.001). The VI of the active lesions and healthy skin were 7.60 (3.60, 12.80)% and 1.10 (0.50, 2.10)%, respectively ( p < 0.001). The VI of the inactive lesions and the healthy skin were 0.85 (0.00, 2.20)% and 1.60 (1.00, 3.10)%, respectively ( p = 0.011). VI differences between active lesions and healthy skin positively correlated with the LoSAI clinical score ( r = 0.625, p = 0.001) and total score ( r = 0.842, p < 0.001). Conclusion SMI can quantitatively detect microvascular blood flow changes in JLS skin, indicating lesion activity and severity. Clinical relevance statement SMI is a convenient, non-invasive, technique for detecting active JLS lesions and can provide valuable information to guide treatment options. Key Points Current grading systems of juvenile localised scleroderma rely on subjective clinical information . Superb Microvascular Imaging identified that vascular indexes between active lesions and healthy skin positively correlated with clinical scores . Superb Microvascular Imaging effectively assesses microvascular blood flow, aiding juvenile localised scleroderma lesion activity evaluation .

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