Limited scleroderma is an immune system disease with localized skin swelling and progressive sclerosis and atrophy. It occurs on the scalp, forehead, waist and abdomen, and extremities. There are four types of scleroderma: patchy, banded, punctate, and generalized, depending on the morphology, with patchy being the most common. The disease generally has no conscious symptoms, some of them may appear mild itching or tingling sensation, gradually dulling the perception, no obvious systemic symptoms, limited scleroderma generally does not invade the internal organs. The cause of limited scleroderma is not clear to scientists so far, after the National Center for Disease Control according to the hospital clinical 5000 cases of limited scleroderma investigation found that it may be related to infection, genetics, environmental factors. Scleroderma Scleroderma is the most common, accounting for about 60%. It often occurs on the abdomen, back, neck, extremities and face. Initially, they appear as round or irregular light red or purplish red edematous patches, which expand after several weeks or months and can be 1-10cm in diameter or larger, with yellowish or ivory color. Banded scleroderma is a linear or band-like distribution of skin sclerosis, usually on the forehead, and can involve the face and head, with obvious local skin atrophy and depression, which can spread upward from the forehead on the side of the median line to the top of the head. Scleroderma with deviated facial atrophy is delineated by the midline, often occurs on one side of the face, the affected side of the face appears skin sclerosis, atrophy, depression and make the face, eyes, nose and corners of the mouth skewed, the affected side of the eye fissure is reduced, the nose may collapse, appear affected side of the face atrophy Droplet scleroderma mostly occurs in the upper neck, chest, shoulders, back, etc., the damage is the size of a soybean to a nickel, white or ivory clustered or linear arrangement of spots, round, sometimes slightly depressed. sometimes slightly depressed. Histopathological examination: fibrosis and microvascular occlusion are characteristic pathological changes of all involved tissues and organs in patients with scleroderma. Focal scleroderma almost never progresses to systemic sclerosis, but some patients with systemic sclerosis have sclerotic plaques or focal linear scleroderma lesions. You should do the relevant tests, I wonder if you do the following tests? For example, routine blood and urine tests, blood sedimentation, protein electrophoresis, antinuclear antibody, rheumatoid factor, and chest X-ray and electrocardiogram. If necessary, skin biopsy should be done. In my personal opinion, the local rheumatologist should take a look at it because it is still a type of immune-related disease, and for progressive or severe focal scleroderma, systemic glucocorticoids and immunosuppressive drugs are appropriate. Methotrexate, penicillamine, mycophenolate, azathioprine, hydroxychloroquine, and cyclosporine have been used clinically with some success. For the rapidly progressive form, initial therapy can be initiated with intravenous methylprednisolone shocks. Rheumatologists have more experience with these treatments. Physiotherapy, such as audio, waxing, massage, etc., should be used in cases of limb involvement. Adherence to physical therapy, together with wax therapy can quickly improve the joint contracture and restricted movement of the limb in band scleroderma and restore the function of the limb. Oral intake of vitamin E has certain effect. Thoracic catheter lymphatic drainage technology principle human immune dysfunction leads to scleroderma, so that the body waste increased, deposited in the tissue interstices, blood vessels are not smooth. Traditional medication and injection cannot drain it out at all, but “thoracic duct lymphatic drainage” can solve this problem very well. As you know, the thoracic duct collects most of the body’s lymphatic fluid and then converges into an injection vein in the left neck, where it only needs to be intercepted to draw lymphatic fluid out of the body, which can play a “River [siltation” effect. The waste in the tissue interstices infiltrates into the lymphatic vessels and then discharges out of the body through the thoracic duct, continues to infiltrate and continues to discharge, and so on and so forth, and the blood vessels naturally flow smoothly.