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Wound, pressure ulcer and burn guidelines - 4: Guidelines for the management of connective tissue disease/vasculitis-associated skin ulcers.

Manabu FujimotoJun AsaiYoshihide AsanoTakayuki IshiiYohei IwataTamihiro KawakamiMasanari KoderaMasatoshi AbeMasahiro AmanoRyuta IkegamiTaiki IseiZenzo IsogaiTakaaki ItoYuji InoueRyokichi IrisawaMasaki OhtsukaYoichi OmotoHiroshi KatoTakafumi KadonoSakae KanekoHiroyuki KanohMasakazu KawaguchiRyuichi KukinoTakeshi KonoMonji KogaKeisuke SakaiEiichi SakuraiYasuko SarayamaYoichi ShintaniMiki TaniokaHideaki TanizakiJun TsujitaNaotaka DoiTakeshi NakanishiAkira HashimotoMinoru HasegawaMasahiro HayashiKuninori HirosakiHideki FujitaHiroshi FujiwaraTakeo MaekawaKoma MatsuoNaoki MadokoroSei-Ichiro MotegiHiroshi YatsushiroOsamu YamasakiYuichiro YoshinoAndres James LE PavouxTakao TachibanaHironobu Ihnnull null
Published in: The Journal of dermatology (2020)
The Japanese Dermatological Association prepared guidelines focused on the treatment of skin ulcers associated with connective tissue disease/vasculitis practical in clinical settings of dermatological care. Skin ulcers associated with connective tissue diseases or vasculitis occur on the background of a wide variety of diseases including, typically, systemic sclerosis but also systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), dermatomyositis, rheumatoid arthritis (RA), various vasculitides and antiphospholipid antibody syndrome (APS). Therefore, in preparing the present guidelines, we considered diagnostic/therapeutic approaches appropriate for each of these disorders to be necessary and developed algorithms and clinical questions for systemic sclerosis, SLE, dermatomyositis, RA, vasculitis and APS.
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