36º Congresso Brasileiro de Reumatologia

Dados do Trabalho


Title

WHOLE BODY MAGNETIC RESONANCE IMAGING IN JUVENILE DERMATOMYOSITIS. A LONGITUDINAL STUDY.

Background

Juvenile dermatomyositis ( JDM) is a rare multisystem connective tissues disorder of unknown aetiology.
Assessment of disease activity is a chalange in clinical practice.

Materials and methods

We included consecutive JDM patients followed in the rheumatology unit. All patients were submitted to clinical
and laboratory evaluation. WB-MRI images were obtained using a 1.5 T MRI scanner and short T inversion
recovery sequences (STIR). Muscle, peripheral inflammation and subcutaneous inflammations signal abnormalities
were scored in 42 muscular groups. Muscle inflammation was classified as: 0 = absent; 1 = Mild to moderate /
involvement less than 50% of muscle extension and 2 = Accentuated / greater than 50%. Peripheral and
subcutaneous inflammations were classified as: 0 = absent; 1 = present; and on proximal and distal extremities.
WB-MRI and clinical assessments were performed concurrently and results compared. Evaluation was repeated
after 12 months. Statistics was performed according to the nature of the variable.

Results

WB-MRI revealed muscle inflammation in 6 (31.6%) at study entry. We observed grade 2 muscle inflammation of
the right and left scapular girdle (1/19 patients), right and left pelvic girdle (2/19 patients) and right and left tight
(1/19 patients). Grade 1 inflammation was observed in peripheral right and left arm (2/19 patients), peripheral
right and left thigh (1/19 patients). Grade 1 subcutaneous inflammation was observed in right and left thigh (1/19
patients) and left leg (1/19 patients). Additionally we observed sacroiilitis (1/19 patients), spinal cord infarction
(21%) and osteonecrosis (5.2%). All patients were treated with standardized treatment. After 12 months 13/19
(68.4%) patients repeated the WB-MRI. Five (38.4%) patients had new/worsening of muscle and subcutaneous
inflammation, one (7.7%) patient had tibial medullary infarction. Correlations between WB-MRI muscle score and
disease activity measures were excellent (Manual Muscle Test: r=−0.88, Childhood Myositis Assessment Scale:
rs=−0.81). Patients with subcutaneous inflammation developed clinically evident subcutaneous calcifications
during follow-up.

Conclusions

WB-MRI provides additional information to clinical evaluation and represents a promising tool to determine the
grade of muscle inflammation to additional peripheral and subcutaneous tissue inflammation

Área

Pediatrics

Categoria

Trabalho Científico

Autores

CARLA HELENA CAPPELLO, SERGIO DERTKIGIL, EDUARDO BRONZATTO, ROBERTO MARINI, SIMONE APPENZELLER