Does dermatoscopy facilitate the detection and diagnosis of vascular skin lesions? A case–control study

Background During dermatoscope-guided surgical procedures, we noticed that vasculature was easily identified. This study investigated the use of dermatoscopy in detecting and diagnosing vascular skin lesions. Methods We retrieved records of patients with vascular skin lesions who underwent dermat...

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Main Authors: A Chuh, V Zawar, G Sciallis
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh 2018-09-01
Series:The Journal of the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.rcpe.ac.uk/sites/default/files/jrcpe_48_3_chuh.pdf
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spelling doaj-d4c97a90c8ff40ccb80e803294a430422020-11-25T00:44:16ZengRoyal College of Physicians of EdinburghThe Journal of the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh1478-27152042-81892018-09-0148321021610.4997/JRCPE.2018.304Does dermatoscopy facilitate the detection and diagnosis of vascular skin lesions? A case–control studyA ChuhV ZawarG SciallisBackground During dermatoscope-guided surgical procedures, we noticed that vasculature was easily identified. This study investigated the use of dermatoscopy in detecting and diagnosing vascular skin lesions. Methods We retrieved records of patients with vascular skin lesions who underwent dermatoscopy over a 3 month period, in two outpatient clinics affiliated with a university teaching hospital. Our controls were similar patients where dermatoscopy was not performed. Results Our new findings are: 1, clinical and dermatoscopic examinations diagnosed significantly more patients with vascular skin lesions than clinical examinations alone (risk ratio: 1.36; 95% confidence interval: 1.10–1.67); 2, the detection rate increase was significant for cherry angiomas (p < 0.001), telangiectasias (p < 0.01) and spider angiomas (p < 0.01); 3, qualitatively, dermatoscopy revealed characteristic configurations, hues and colour saturations of the vascular skin lesions; and 4, the first reported dermatoscopic images of focal essential telangiectasia and petechial angioma. Conclusion In our setting, clinical and dermatoscopic examinations significantly facilitated detecting and diagnosing vascular skin lesions, compared to clinical examination alone.https://www.rcpe.ac.uk/sites/default/files/jrcpe_48_3_chuh.pdfangiomacross-polarisationhaemangiomaport-wine stainspider naevustelangiectasia
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author A Chuh
V Zawar
G Sciallis
spellingShingle A Chuh
V Zawar
G Sciallis
Does dermatoscopy facilitate the detection and diagnosis of vascular skin lesions? A case–control study
The Journal of the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh
angioma
cross-polarisation
haemangioma
port-wine stain
spider naevus
telangiectasia
author_facet A Chuh
V Zawar
G Sciallis
author_sort A Chuh
title Does dermatoscopy facilitate the detection and diagnosis of vascular skin lesions? A case–control study
title_short Does dermatoscopy facilitate the detection and diagnosis of vascular skin lesions? A case–control study
title_full Does dermatoscopy facilitate the detection and diagnosis of vascular skin lesions? A case–control study
title_fullStr Does dermatoscopy facilitate the detection and diagnosis of vascular skin lesions? A case–control study
title_full_unstemmed Does dermatoscopy facilitate the detection and diagnosis of vascular skin lesions? A case–control study
title_sort does dermatoscopy facilitate the detection and diagnosis of vascular skin lesions? a case–control study
publisher Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh
series The Journal of the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh
issn 1478-2715
2042-8189
publishDate 2018-09-01
description Background During dermatoscope-guided surgical procedures, we noticed that vasculature was easily identified. This study investigated the use of dermatoscopy in detecting and diagnosing vascular skin lesions. Methods We retrieved records of patients with vascular skin lesions who underwent dermatoscopy over a 3 month period, in two outpatient clinics affiliated with a university teaching hospital. Our controls were similar patients where dermatoscopy was not performed. Results Our new findings are: 1, clinical and dermatoscopic examinations diagnosed significantly more patients with vascular skin lesions than clinical examinations alone (risk ratio: 1.36; 95% confidence interval: 1.10–1.67); 2, the detection rate increase was significant for cherry angiomas (p < 0.001), telangiectasias (p < 0.01) and spider angiomas (p < 0.01); 3, qualitatively, dermatoscopy revealed characteristic configurations, hues and colour saturations of the vascular skin lesions; and 4, the first reported dermatoscopic images of focal essential telangiectasia and petechial angioma. Conclusion In our setting, clinical and dermatoscopic examinations significantly facilitated detecting and diagnosing vascular skin lesions, compared to clinical examination alone.
topic angioma
cross-polarisation
haemangioma
port-wine stain
spider naevus
telangiectasia
url https://www.rcpe.ac.uk/sites/default/files/jrcpe_48_3_chuh.pdf
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AT gsciallis doesdermatoscopyfacilitatethedetectionanddiagnosisofvascularskinlesionsacasecontrolstudy
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