Objective. To investigate the relationship between the vasculopathy of juvenile dermatomyositis (juvenile DM) and the balance between the angiostatic ELR؊ and angiogenic ELR؉ CXC chemokines in the muscle of patients with the disease.Methods. The expression of 3 ELR؊ CXC chemokines (interferon-inducible protein 10 [IP-10], monokine induced by interferon-␥, and interferon-inducible T cell ␣-chemoattractant) and 2 ELR؉ CXC chemokines was quantitated in muscle biopsy samples from 7 patients with juvenile DM and 7 healthy children, by real-time polymerase chain reaction. The findings were correlated with various histopathologic features, with particular emphasis on the degree of vasculopathy. Synovial biopsy specimens from patients with juvenile rheumatoid arthritis (JRA) were used for additional comparison.Results. The angiostatic ELR؊ chemokines were expressed at high levels, while the angiogenic ELR؉ chemokines were barely detectable, in most juvenile DM samples. This contrasted sharply with the findings in both normal muscle biopsy specimens and JRA synovial tissue specimens. The expression of the ELR؊ chemokines in juvenile DM samples correlated with the intensity of mononuclear cell infiltration. Furthermore, the juvenile DM samples with the highest degree of capillary loss had the highest levels of ELR؊ CXC chemokines. The presence of IP-10 in juvenile DM muscle specimens was confirmed by immunohistochemistry analysis. In addition, immunohistochemical staining of muscle tissue revealed that CXCR3, a receptor utilized by ELR؊ CXC chemokines, was expressed in vascular endothelial cells.Conclusion. Increased expression of the interferon-induced angiostatic ELR؊ CXC chemokines is a feature of juvenile DM that parallels the degree of vasculopathy in patients with the disease. Collectively, these findings are consistent with a model in which a subset of inflammatory cells secrete angiostatic ligands, which then contribute to a local atrophying effect on the muscle's vasculature via a receptor-mediated process.Juvenile dermatomyositis (juvenile DM) is the most common of the pediatric chronic inflammatory myopathies. Although myositis is the main clinical feature of this disease, many rheumatologists view juvenile DM as a systemic vasculopathy rather than simply an