Functional lymphatic alterations in patients suffering from lipedema.

Resource type
Authors/contributors
Title
Functional lymphatic alterations in patients suffering from lipedema.
Abstract
Lipedema is a chronic vascular disease almost exclusively of female sex, characterized by the deposit of fat on the legs, with an "Egyptian column" shape, orthostatic edema, hypothermia of the skin, alteration of the plantar support, and negativity of Stemmer's sign. The etiology and pathogenesis of this disease are still the object of study, and therapy is very difficult. Various authors have described morphologic and functional alterations of prelymphatic structures and of lymphatic vessels. The big veins remain untouched in the phlebograms and an alteration of the skin elasticity is demonstrated. The present authors have studied by dynamic lymphoscintigraphy 12 women patients suffering from lipedema, and compared the results with those of 5 normal subjects and 5 patients suffering from idiopathic lymphedema who were sex and age matched with the patients suffering from lipedema. The patients suffering from lipedema showed an abnormal lymphoscintigraphic pattern with a slowing of the lymphatic flow that presented some analogies to the alterations found in the patients suffering from lymphedema. A frequent asymmetry was also noticed in the lymphoscintigraphic findings that is in contrast to the symmetry of the clinical profile.
Publication
Angiology
Volume
46
Issue
4
Pages
333-339
Date
1995 Apr
Journal Abbr
Angiology
Language
eng
ISSN
0003-3197 0003-3197
Extra
Place: United States
Citation
Bilancini, S., Lucchi, M., Tucci, S., & Eleuteri, P. (1995). Functional lymphatic alterations in patients suffering from lipedema. Angiology, 46(4), 333–339. https://doi.org/10.1177/000331979504600408