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Role of lymphoscintigraphy in diagnosis and management of patients with leg swelling of unclear etiology

BACKGROUND: To study the utility of lymphoscintigraphy in detection of lymphatic obstruction in patients with leg swelling of unclear etiology, selection of site for nodo venous shunt procedure, and follow-up lymphoscintigraphic documentation of improved lymph flow in surgically treated limb. MATERI...

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Autores principales: Kalawat, Tek Chand, Chittoria, Ravi Kumar, Reddy, Praveen Kumar, Suneetha, Batchu, Narayan, Ravishwar, Ravi, Parthsarthi
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Medknow Publications & Media Pvt Ltd 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3759082/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24019651
http://dx.doi.org/10.4103/0972-3919.115392
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author Kalawat, Tek Chand
Chittoria, Ravi Kumar
Reddy, Praveen Kumar
Suneetha, Batchu
Narayan, Ravishwar
Ravi, Parthsarthi
author_facet Kalawat, Tek Chand
Chittoria, Ravi Kumar
Reddy, Praveen Kumar
Suneetha, Batchu
Narayan, Ravishwar
Ravi, Parthsarthi
author_sort Kalawat, Tek Chand
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: To study the utility of lymphoscintigraphy in detection of lymphatic obstruction in patients with leg swelling of unclear etiology, selection of site for nodo venous shunt procedure, and follow-up lymphoscintigraphic documentation of improved lymph flow in surgically treated limb. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Twenty four consecutive patients with leg swelling, 10 male, 14 female with mean age 47 years, range from 13 years to 74 years underwent lymphoscintigraphy. All patients were referred from Department of Plastic Surgery, after initial work-up, and routine investigations to rule out the other causes of leg swelling. Both clinical and scintigraphic staging performed for all patients. All clinically and scintigraphically positive patients treated with decongestive lymphatic therapy (DLT). In addition to the DLT, those patients positive for unilateral or bilateral lymphedema, consented for surgical intervention, nodo venous shunt (NVS) in their only affected or one of the two affected lower limbs. Follow-up lymphoscintigraphy performed in operated cases after 3 months to 6 months of surgery, lymphoscintigraphy images of each patient in pre and post-surgery compared. RESULTS: In 20/24 cases (83%) of clinically positive leg swelling were found to be positive for lymphedema on lymphoscintigraphy and remaining, 4/24 were scintigraphically normal. Based on the clinical and lymphoscintigraphy staging, 03/20 cases (15%) had Grade I lymphedema, 01/20 (5%) Grade II lymphedema, 06/20 (30%) Grade III and remaining 10/20 (50%) had Grade IV lymphedema. 11/20 cases of Lymphedema (55%) were managed conservatively by only DLT and in remaining 09/20 cases (45%), who were case of Grade IV, lymphedema (five patients with unilateral and four patients with bilateral disease) initially treated with DLT, and on completion of DLT, undergone for NVS procedure, in their unilaterally affected lower limb or one of the two diseased lower limbs. All nine patients showed remarkable clinical improvement in leg swelling and their follow-up lymphoscintigraphy showed normal visualization of lymphatic channels. No patient developed any recurrence. CONCLUSION: Pre-operative functional evaluation of lymphatic channels using lymphoscintigraphy, is a widely available, simple imaging test and highly useful for documentation of lymphedema in patients with leg swelling of unclear etiology and also for exact localization of inguinal lymph nodes to perform the NVS procedure. Further, it can play important role for follow-up of patients receiving DLT or DLT with surgical intervention that provides early relief from clinical symptoms.
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spelling pubmed-37590822013-09-09 Role of lymphoscintigraphy in diagnosis and management of patients with leg swelling of unclear etiology Kalawat, Tek Chand Chittoria, Ravi Kumar Reddy, Praveen Kumar Suneetha, Batchu Narayan, Ravishwar Ravi, Parthsarthi Indian J Nucl Med Original Article BACKGROUND: To study the utility of lymphoscintigraphy in detection of lymphatic obstruction in patients with leg swelling of unclear etiology, selection of site for nodo venous shunt procedure, and follow-up lymphoscintigraphic documentation of improved lymph flow in surgically treated limb. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Twenty four consecutive patients with leg swelling, 10 male, 14 female with mean age 47 years, range from 13 years to 74 years underwent lymphoscintigraphy. All patients were referred from Department of Plastic Surgery, after initial work-up, and routine investigations to rule out the other causes of leg swelling. Both clinical and scintigraphic staging performed for all patients. All clinically and scintigraphically positive patients treated with decongestive lymphatic therapy (DLT). In addition to the DLT, those patients positive for unilateral or bilateral lymphedema, consented for surgical intervention, nodo venous shunt (NVS) in their only affected or one of the two affected lower limbs. Follow-up lymphoscintigraphy performed in operated cases after 3 months to 6 months of surgery, lymphoscintigraphy images of each patient in pre and post-surgery compared. RESULTS: In 20/24 cases (83%) of clinically positive leg swelling were found to be positive for lymphedema on lymphoscintigraphy and remaining, 4/24 were scintigraphically normal. Based on the clinical and lymphoscintigraphy staging, 03/20 cases (15%) had Grade I lymphedema, 01/20 (5%) Grade II lymphedema, 06/20 (30%) Grade III and remaining 10/20 (50%) had Grade IV lymphedema. 11/20 cases of Lymphedema (55%) were managed conservatively by only DLT and in remaining 09/20 cases (45%), who were case of Grade IV, lymphedema (five patients with unilateral and four patients with bilateral disease) initially treated with DLT, and on completion of DLT, undergone for NVS procedure, in their unilaterally affected lower limb or one of the two diseased lower limbs. All nine patients showed remarkable clinical improvement in leg swelling and their follow-up lymphoscintigraphy showed normal visualization of lymphatic channels. No patient developed any recurrence. CONCLUSION: Pre-operative functional evaluation of lymphatic channels using lymphoscintigraphy, is a widely available, simple imaging test and highly useful for documentation of lymphedema in patients with leg swelling of unclear etiology and also for exact localization of inguinal lymph nodes to perform the NVS procedure. Further, it can play important role for follow-up of patients receiving DLT or DLT with surgical intervention that provides early relief from clinical symptoms. Medknow Publications & Media Pvt Ltd 2012 /pmc/articles/PMC3759082/ /pubmed/24019651 http://dx.doi.org/10.4103/0972-3919.115392 Text en Copyright: © Indian Journal of Nuclear Medicine http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0 This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 Unported, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Article
Kalawat, Tek Chand
Chittoria, Ravi Kumar
Reddy, Praveen Kumar
Suneetha, Batchu
Narayan, Ravishwar
Ravi, Parthsarthi
Role of lymphoscintigraphy in diagnosis and management of patients with leg swelling of unclear etiology
title Role of lymphoscintigraphy in diagnosis and management of patients with leg swelling of unclear etiology
title_full Role of lymphoscintigraphy in diagnosis and management of patients with leg swelling of unclear etiology
title_fullStr Role of lymphoscintigraphy in diagnosis and management of patients with leg swelling of unclear etiology
title_full_unstemmed Role of lymphoscintigraphy in diagnosis and management of patients with leg swelling of unclear etiology
title_short Role of lymphoscintigraphy in diagnosis and management of patients with leg swelling of unclear etiology
title_sort role of lymphoscintigraphy in diagnosis and management of patients with leg swelling of unclear etiology
topic Original Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3759082/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24019651
http://dx.doi.org/10.4103/0972-3919.115392
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