Acessibilidade / Reportar erro

Ultrasonography in rheumatoid arthritis: what rheumatologists should know

Ultrasonography has recently gained prestige as an adjuvant method for the diagnosis and therapeutic follow-up of rheumatoid arthritis, although radiography remains the imaging modality traditionally and widely used for those purposes. The great advantage of the ultrasonographic study, which has motivated enthusiastic research in the area, resides in its capacity to detect synovitis and bone erosion at a pre-radiographic phase, which has been increasingly valued in preventing late and definitive structural damage. Because that is a relatively new subject, several scientific articles have been published in recent years about the potential applications of ultrasonography in individuals with rheumatoid arthritis, some of which directed to researchers and others to clinical rheumatologists. This study aimed at assessing the currently available bibliography on the subject and at describing only the concepts that are of practical applicability in the daily routine of clinical rheumatologists.

ultrasonography; rheumatoid arthritis; review; color Doppler ultrasonography


Sociedade Brasileira de Reumatologia Av Brigadeiro Luiz Antonio, 2466 - Cj 93., 01402-000 São Paulo - SP, Tel./Fax: 55 11 3289 7165 - São Paulo - SP - Brazil
E-mail: sbre@terra.com.br