Full bibliography
High-Volume Liposuction in Lipedema Patients: Effects on Serum Vitamin D
Resource type
Authors/contributors
- Flores, Tonatiuh (Author)
- Kerschbaumer, Celina (Author)
- Jaklin, Florian J. (Author)
- Glisic, Christina (Author)
- Sabitzer, Hugo (Author)
- Nedomansky, Jakob (Author)
- Wolf, Peter (Author)
- Weber, Michael (Author)
- Bergmeister, Konstantin D. (Author)
- Schrögendorfer, Klaus F. (Author)
Title
High-Volume Liposuction in Lipedema Patients: Effects on Serum Vitamin D
Abstract
Background: Lipedema is a subcutaneous adipose tissue disorder characterized by increased pathological adipocytes mainly in the extremities. Vitamin D is stored in adipocytes, and serum levels inversely correlate with BMI. As adipocytes are removed during liposuction, lipedema patients might be prone to further substantial vitamin D loss while their levels are already decreased. Therefore, we examined the effect of liposuction on perioperative serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D levels. Methods: In patients undergoing lipedema liposuction, blood samples were obtained pre- and postoperatively. Statistical analyses were performed to correlate the volume of lipoaspirate, patients' BMI and number of sessions to vitamin D levels. Results: Overall, 213 patients were analyzed. Mean liposuction volume was 6615.33 ± 3884.25 mL, mean BMI was 32.18 ± 7.26 kg/m2. mean preoperative vitamin D levels were 30.1 ± 14.45 ng/mL (borderline deficient according to the endocrine society) and mean postoperative vitamin D levels were 21.91 ± 9.18 ng/mL (deficient). A significant decrease in serum vitamin D was seen in our patients (p < 0.001) of mean 7.83 ng/mL. The amount of vitamin D loss was not associated with BMI or aspiration volume in our patients (p > 0.05). Interestingly, vitamin D dynamics showed a steady drop regardless of volume aspirated or preoperative levels. Conclusions: Many lipedema patients have low vitamin D levels preoperatively. Liposuction significantly reduced these levels additionally, regardless of aspirated volume or BMI. However, vitamin D loss was constant and predictable; thus, patients at risk are easily identified. Overall, lipedema patients undergoing liposuction are prone to vitamin D deficiency, and the long-term effects in this population are currently unknown.
Publication
Journal of Clinical Medicine
Volume
13
Issue
10
Pages
2846
Date
2024-05-11
Journal Abbr
J Clin Med
Language
eng
ISSN
2077-0383
Short Title
High-Volume Liposuction in Lipedema Patients
Library Catalog
PubMed
Citation
Flores, T., Kerschbaumer, C., Jaklin, F. J., Glisic, C., Sabitzer, H., Nedomansky, J., Wolf, P., Weber, M., Bergmeister, K. D., & Schrögendorfer, K. F. (2024). High-Volume Liposuction in Lipedema Patients: Effects on Serum Vitamin D. Journal of Clinical Medicine, 13(10), 2846. https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm13102846
Topic
Publication
Link to this record