Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0028754 (obesity)
124,988 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Elephantiasis nostras verrucosa (ENV) is a unique, chronic condition found in patients with obesity and chronic secondary lymphedema. It develops due to chronic inflammation and recurrent infection, most commonly on gravity-dependent sites. Progressive tissue enlargement, deformity, and disability necessitate intervention. First, clinicians should explore the etiology of patients' secondary lymphedema, as this is paramount in determining treatment for ENV. The fundamental goal is alleviating lymphatic obstruction. Our literature review of available cases of ENV elucidates Class III obesity as a factor common to all available cases of ENV. As such, weight loss is a key component of treatment. Medical management and weight loss are most effective when combined with physiologic interventions such as compression garments and decongestive physiotherapy. If surgical intervention is required, one of the mainstays of patient management is a reductive approach, aimed at removing excess adipose and fibrotic tissue to improve lymphatic patency and flow. Optimal postoperative outcomes are achieved when patients also undergo physiologic procedures to bypass obstructions and connect functioning lymphatic vessels.
...
PMID:Disease Specific to Chronic Lymphedema and Class III Obesity. 3235 76

Elephantiasis nostras verrucosa (ENV) is a rare dermatological disease associated with chronic lymphedema caused by obesity, soft tissue infection, or chronic venous insufficiency. Although surgical debridement may be sufficient to treat the skin manifestations of ENV, treatment of ENV should focus on reducing lymph stasis to improve the skin changes and prevent recurrence. In this case report, we present the case of a 79-year-old woman who developed obesity-associated ENV in the lower leg. She was successfully treated by a combination of lymphaticovenous anastomoses and the oriental herbal medicine Bofutsushosan. To our knowledge, this is the first reported obesity-associated ENV case in which skin pathology was not only healed, but both edema relief and weight loss were successful. A treatment combining both surgery and the herbal medicine could be a potential therapeutic candidate for obesity-associated ENV.
...
PMID:Hybrid Treatment Combining Lymphaticovenous Anastomoses and the Oriental Herbal Medicine Bofutsushosan for Obesity-Associated Lower Leg Elephantiasis Nostras Verrucosa: A Case Report. 3251 5


<< Previous 1 2