File(s) not publicly available
Lymphatic dysfunction in the apparently clinically normal contralateral limbs of patients with unilateral lower limb swelling
journal contribution
posted on 2023-06-08, 13:28 authored by Katherine M Burnand, Daphne M Glass, Peter S Mortimer, Adrien Michael PetersPURPOSE To determine how often lymphatic dysfunction is bilateral when, clinically, lymphedema appears unilateral. METHODS Lymphoscintigraphy was performed after subcutaneous Tc-99m-nanocolloid injection in the first webspaces of both feet. The percentage of injected radioactivity accumulating in the ilioinguinal regions was recorded in dedicated images separately acquired at 60 and 180 minutes after injection. RESULTS Within a consecutive series of 204 patients, 74 had unilateral clinical lymphedema of whom 68 had abnormal scintigraphy. Of these 68 patients, 46 had unilateral abnormal scintigraphy affecting the clinically abnormal limb, but 20 patients had bilateral abnormal scintigraphy and 2 had unilateral abnormal scintigraphy in the clinically unaffected limb. Thus, 32% (22/68) of patients in whom clinical lymphedema appeared to be unilateral, nevertheless, had abnormal scintigraphy in the clinically normal limb. Twenty-nine patients had no clinical evidence of lymphedema in either limb and were scintigraphically normal bilaterally. Mean ilioinguinal nodal accumulation at 180 minutes in the 44 limbs of 22 of these clinically and scintigraphically normal patients (dedicated ilioinguinal imaging was not performed in all patients) was 13.1% (standard deviation, 8.8%), higher (P = 0.02) than the mean value of 9.3% (standard deviation, 5.0%) in the clinically and scintigraphically normal contralateral limbs of 39 patients with unilateral clinical lymphedema. CONCLUSIONS In the presence of unilateral lymphedema, the contralateral limb is often also abnormal. On lymphoscintigraphy, therefore, care should be taken before diagnosing unilateral lymphatic dysfunction. Quantification should be included in routine lymphoscintigraphy, as reduced ilioinguinal nodal accumulation may be the only apparent abnormality.
History
Publication status
- Published
Journal
Clinical Nuclear MedicineISSN
0363-9762Publisher
Lippincott, Williams & WilkinsExternal DOI
Issue
1Volume
37Page range
9-13Department affiliated with
- Clinical and Experimental Medicine Publications
Full text available
- No
Peer reviewed?
- Yes
Legacy Posted Date
2012-11-12Usage metrics
Categories
No categories selectedKeywords
Licence
Exports
RefWorks
BibTeX
Ref. manager
Endnote
DataCite
NLM
DC