Subepidermal low-echogenic band—its utility in clinical practice: a systematic review

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SUMMARY

    Polanska et_al observed a decrease in the number of patients in which SLEB was visualized: from 100% to 18% (p and amp;lt; 0.001) in the affected skin and from 20.5% to 5.1% (p and amp;lt; 0.001) in the healthy skin after 24 weeks of treatment. SLEB can be perceived as a skin-aging marker, correlating with the thickness of the skin at the forearm level (p and amp;lt; 0.01, r=0.512), an increased SLEB indicating the destruction of collagen fibers at the level of the . . .

     

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