This study investigates the relationship between serum catestatin levels and systemic sclerosis (SSc), with a focus on cardiovascular involvement and microvascular alterations, to determine catestatin's potential as a biomarker of disease activity and severity.
Systemic sclerosis is a chronic autoimmune disease characterized by fibrosis, autoimmunity, and vasculopathy, with cardiovascular complications accounting for a significant proportion of morbidity and mortality. Despite advances in diagnostic tools, early identification of high-risk patients remains challenging. Catestatin, a peptide derived from chromogranin A, has recently gained attention as a biomarker with regulatory roles in cardiovascular physiology, including hypertension, endothelial function, and vascular remodeling. This cross-sectional study will assess serum catestatin levels in patients with SSc compared with healthy controls. It aims to correlate these levels with disease activity indices, cardiovascular involvement (using echocardiography, ECG, and blood pressure monitoring), and microvascular abnormalities identified via nailfold capillaroscopy. Findings from this study may establish catestatin as a promising biomarker, paving the way for improved management and cardiovascular risk stratification in SSc patients.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
70
change in level of serum catestatin concentration in systemic sclerosis patients compared with healthy controls.
Quantification of serum catestatin levels using ELISA, directly compared between the two study groups.
Time frame: baseline
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