A systematic review of the inclusion of non-inflammatory ultrasonographic enthesopathy findings in enthesitis scoring indices

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Abstract

Ultrasound has advanced the diagnosis and management of patients with inflammatory rheumatic conditions. It can be used to identify and monitor enthesitis, a cardinal feature of spondyloarthropthies. Several enthesitis scoring systems utilizing ultrasound to determine en-theseal involvement have been developed. These scoring systems generally rely on determining the presence or absence of erosions, tendon enlargement, power Doppler signal, or enthesophytes. This systematic review identified ultrasound scoring systems that have been utilized for evaluating enthesitis and what key components derive the score. Review of these scoring systems, however, demonstrated confounding as some of the score components including enthesophytes may be seen in non-inflammatory conditions and some components including erosions can be seen from chronic damage, but not necessarily indicate active inflammatory disease. What is furthermore limiting is that currently there is not an agreed upon term to describe non-inflammatory enthesopathies, further complicating these scoring systems. This review highlights the need for a more comprehensive ultrasound enthesopathy scoring index.

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APA

Mascarenhas, S., & Couette, N. (2021). A systematic review of the inclusion of non-inflammatory ultrasonographic enthesopathy findings in enthesitis scoring indices. Diagnostics, 11(4). https://doi.org/10.3390/diagnostics11040669

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