1. Increased angiopoietin-1 improves nailfold capillary morphology in patients with systemic sclerosis.
- Author
-
Shima Y, Watanabe A, Inoue N, Maruyama T, Kunitomo E, Matsushima Y, and Kumanogoh A
- Subjects
- Humans, Female, Middle Aged, Male, Prospective Studies, Aged, Time Factors, Adult, Up-Regulation, Treatment Outcome, Biomarkers blood, Microscopic Angioscopy, Angiopoietin-1 blood, Scleroderma, Systemic blood, Scleroderma, Systemic physiopathology, Capillaries pathology, Capillaries physiopathology, Capillaries metabolism, Raynaud Disease physiopathology, Raynaud Disease blood, Raynaud Disease pathology, Nails blood supply
- Abstract
Objective: Raynaud's phenomenon is a common symptom of systemic sclerosis. We previously reported that elbow heating increases angiopoietin-1 in the fingertips and alleviates Raynaud's phenomenon. Angiopoietin-1 levels decrease in patients with systemic sclerosis with severe capillary damage. We aimed to conduct a prospective study to confirm whether the increase in angiopoietin-1 caused by heating modifies capillary morphology., Methods: The left ring fingers of 19 patients with systemic sclerosis were monitored six times at 4-week intervals using capillaroscopy, during which both elbows were heated using disposable heating pads for 8 weeks. Blood samples were collected from the same fingertips four times-before heating, twice during heating, and once after heating-to measure angiopoietin-1., Results: In six patients, the peak increase in angiopoietin-1 occurred 4 weeks after the start of heating, whereas in seven patients, the peak value was observed 4 weeks after the termination thereof. No change in the density of the front-row capillaries was observed by capillaroscopy. The proportion of hairpin-shaped capillaries increased from 20.2 % during the preheating period to 26.6 % during the heating period (p = 0.00107). When a correlation coefficient of 0.6 or higher was set as significant, there was a strong correlation between changes in fingertip angiopoietin-1 levels and changes in the proportion of hairpin-shaped capillaries in six patients., Conclusion: Increased angiopoietin-1 levels in the fingertip due to elbow heating may improve the peripheral capillary morphology in patients with systemic sclerosis., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest Research expenses and labor costs for Y.S. and A.W. were provided by Kobayashi Pharmaceutical Co., Ltd. Additionally, N.I., T.M., E.K., and Y.M. received support from Kobayashi Pharmaceutical Co., Ltd. A.K. declares no conflicts of interest regarding this paper., (Copyright © 2024. Published by Elsevier Inc.)
- Published
- 2025
- Full Text
- View/download PDF