| Literature DB >> 27275844 |
Janet Douglass1,2, Patricia Graves2,3, Susan Gordon2,4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Lymphedema is a debilitating and disfiguring sequela of an overwhelmed lymphatic system. The most common causes of secondary lymphedema are lymphatic filariasis (LF), a vector-borne, parasitic disease endemic in 73 tropical countries, and treatment for cancer in developed countries. Lymphedema is incurable and requires life-long care so identification of effective lymphedema management is imperative to improve quality of life, reduce the burden on family resources and benefit the local community. This review was conducted to evaluate the evidence for effective lymphedema self-care strategies that might be applicable to management of all types of secondary lymphedema. METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPALEntities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27275844 PMCID: PMC4898789 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pntd.0004740
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Negl Trop Dis ISSN: 1935-2727
Keywords used to search databases.
| Search | Keywords |
|---|---|
| Search 1 | ((lymphoedema or lymphedema or elephantiasis) and (filariasis)) |
| Search 2 | ((lymphoedema or lymphedema or elephantiasis) and (cancer or oncology)) |
| Search 3 | 1 OR 2 |
| Search 4 | (self-care or "self care" or basic-care or "basic care" or "community based home care" or "community-based home-care" or "self management" or self-management or self-treatment or "self treatment" or self-massage or "self massage" or "partner massage" or home-care or "home care" or limb-care or "limb care" or foot-care or "foot care" or hygiene or breathing or exercise) |
| Search 5 | 3 AND 4 |
Fig 1PRISMA flow chart of search results.
Fig 2Forest plot of the proportion of FR-LE participants experiencing any ADLA episodes.
Change in FR-LE limb volume after 12 months of self-care in Addiss et al 2010 [36].
| Stage | Baseline Mean ml (range) | After 12 months Mean ml (range) | N (legs) | % reduction | P |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1610 (1080–2160) | 1604 (1310–2130) | 26 | 0.3% | ||
| 1937 (1515–2760) | 1786 (1470–2030) | 9 | 7.8% | ||
| 1986 (1450–2835) | 1909 (1230–2970) | 41 | 4.0% | p<0.05 | |
| 2839 (1920–3700) | 2354 (1580–3260) | 15 | 17.1% | p<0.05 | |
| 3644 (2390–4760) | 3082 (1510–4010) | 5 | 15.4% |
# Dreyer et al 2002 [11]
ml = millilitres
* Water displacement method
Proportion of Participants by FR-LE stage after 6–24 months of self-care.
| Study ID | Stage | Baseline | 6 months | 12 months | 24 months |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1–2 | 48.73% | 54.01% | 55.76% | 60.13% p = 0.0064 | |
| 3–4 | 37.57% | 32.41% | 30.22% | 25.32% p = 0.0006 | |
| 5–6 | 12.70% | 13.58% | 14.02% | 14.56% | |
| I | 8.6% | n/a | 16% | n/a | |
| II | 52.7% | n/a | 46% | n/a | |
| III | 31.3% | n/a | 31% | n/a | |
| IV | 7.4% | n/a | 8% | n/a |
*Eleven people reverted from Stage II to Stage I (p = 0.012)
1 = Stages per Dreyer et al 2002 [11]
2 = Stages per WHO 2003 [13]
Fig 3Change in FR-LE limb circumference after 12 months of medicated cream use.
Fig 4Forest plot of percentage change in relative CR-LE limb volume after exercise.
Change in CR-LE limb volume (ml) after 3–6 months of SLD.
| Study ID | Limb |Duration (months)| | Before Intervention | After Intervention | % Reduction (95% CI) | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Limb | Volume ml | N | Volume ml | N | |||
| Upper limb (RLV) | 3 | 361 (78–1184) | 22 | n/a | 22 | 60% (43% - 78%) | |
| Upper limb (RLV) | 6 | 107.0 (-372.0–2421.0) | 81 | 60.0 (-334–2344) | 71 | 43.92% | |
| Right lower limb (WLV) | 6 | 6218.3 (1772.5) | 81 | 6057.1 (2093.0) | 71 | 2.59% | |
| Left lower limb (WLV) | 6 | 6177.9 (1857.9) | 81 | 5797.9(2014.9) | 71 | 3.20% | |
| Upper limb (WLV) | 3 | 2685 | 18 | 2587 | 18 | 24% p<0.0001 | |
WLV = Whole limb volume
RLV = Relative limb volume, difference between affected and unaffected limbs
1 = Volume calculated from limb circumference at 4cm intervals
2 = Volume calculated from limb circumference at 5cm intervals
SD = standard deviation
n/a = data not provided