investigations
Last reviewed 05/2021
Routine blood tests are not carried out in primary Raynaud’s phenomenon (1).
A small group of investigations are helpful in patients with a clinical suspicion of secondary Raynaud’s phenomenon:
- full blood count and ESR
- presence of anaemia and lymphopenia, may suggest an underlying autoimmune disease;
- immunology test for antinuclear antibodies (ANA), anti-Ro (SS-A), and anti-La (SS-B) etc
- examination of nailfold capillaries:
- capillaroscopy is better since ophthalmoscopy (20× magnification, dermatoscope 10× magnification) can miss capillary changes
- but the gold standard method is videocapillaroscopy (200× magnification, or a biomicroscope)
- shows abnormal morphological patterns, e.g. dilatation, haemorrhages, loss of capillaries, angiogenesis etc (1)
- chest X-ray - in patients with unilateral signs to look for a cervical rib compressing the bronchial and cephalic vascular branches
- renal and liver function tests
- TFTs
- cryoglobulin estimation
- urinalysis
- hand X-ray (1,2,3)
Specialist investigations carried out in secondary care include:
- infrared thermography
- laser doppler flowmetry
- portable radiometry
- digital plethymography (1)
Note:
- laboratory tests must be used in conjunction with clinical features (1).
Reference: