lymphedema Word Scramble
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Question | Answer |
true or false: chronic lymphedema is not reversible and requires a lifetime management | true |
what are the most common causes of secondary lymphedem | obstruction of lymphatic drainage system- cancer therapy (RT, node dissection) trauma, venous reconstruction, obesity, infection, malignancy |
explain the difference between lymphedema and lipedema | lymphedema-unilateral, lipedema bilateral |
what is the Stemmer sign? | inablilty to pinch skin into a fold on dorsal aspect below second metatarsal |
identify areas for effective management of lymphededa | manual lymphatic drainage(therapeutic massage is what book says, not current guidelines) skin care compression |
effective compression bandagin requires ___mmHg pressure | 40-60 |
what is the gold standard for lymphedema treatment | complete decongestive therapy (CDT) |
list components of CDT | Manual lymphatic drainage (MLD) compression, therapeutic exercises, skin care, pt education |
what are absolute contraindications to CDT | thrombosis, uncompensated heart failure |
what are "use CDT with caution" conditions | arterial insufficiency, HTN, asthma, decreased sensation (DM, paralysis) |
adjuvant therapies to CDT | pneumatic compression, compression strapping devices, kinesis tape, low level laser therapy |
what are the features of lipedema | bilateral, spares hands or feet, doesn't respond to elevation, non pitting, may have hyperkeratinosis or papillomatosis |
risk factors for lymphedema | longstanding CVI, cancer treatment (RT, surgery) obesity, infection, severe trauma, circulatory reconstruction, burns |
what is primary lymphedema | congenital (dx within first year of life) Milroy disease, Meige disease (lymph. praecox) Lymph. Tarda (>35y/o) |
what is mechanical insufficiency | low volume, is a result of altered function of lymph system |
what is dynamic insufficiency | high volume, lymph load exceeds transport capacity (CHF hypoproteinemia CVI, dependency) |
what is combined insufficiency | hemodynamic insufficiency AND lymphovenous (caused by CVI) |
describe latent stage of lymphedema | no clinical signs, limb may feel heavy or tight |
describe stage I of lymphedema | edema is observable, resolves with elevation, may be pitting, tissue soft negative or borderline Stemmers sign |
describe stage II of lymphedema | edema is pitting and/or nonpitting, doesn't decrease whit elevation decreased ROM, +stemmers sign, fibrosis present, hyperkeratinosis, papillomatosis may be present |
describe stage III of lymphedema | fibrosis, no pitting, disfigurement/elephantiasis, subcutaneous hypertrophy, ongoing infections likely |
what labs may be pertinent | serum albumin, UA to assess for other causes of edema (renal/hepatic) lymph fluid protein level |
what are the treatment goals | limb size reduction and preservation, alleviate sx's, prevent infection, improve limb function, ROM, improve QOL |
Explain lipedema | Occurs in Women during or after puberty, nonpitting, tender to palpating, bruising common, always bilateral, ends at ankles, skin changes uncommon |
Created by:
Beth Perry
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