Lipedema: friend and foe.
Yanira Sanchez-De la TorreRita WadeeaVictoria RosasKaren L HerbstPublished in: Hormone molecular biology and clinical investigation (2018)
Background Lipedema is a chronic disorder presenting in women during puberty or other times of hormonal change such as childbirth or menopause, characterized by symmetric enlargement of nodular, painful subcutaneous adipose tissue (fat) in the limbs, sparing the hands, feet and trunk. Healthcare providers underdiagnose or misdiagnose lipedema as obesity or lymphedema. Materials and methods The benefits (friend) and negative aspects (foe) of lipedema were collected from published literature, discussions with women with lipedema, and institutional review board approved evaluation of medical charts of 46 women with lipedema. Results Lipedema is a foe because lifestyle change does not reduce lipedema fat, the fat is painful, can become obese, causes gait and joint abnormalities, fatigue, lymphedema and psychosocial distress. Hypermobility associated with lipedema can exacerbate joint disease and aortic disease. In contrast, lipedema fat can be a friend as it is associated with relative reductions in obesity-related metabolic dysfunction. In new data collected, lipedema was associated with a low risk of diabetes (2%), dyslipidemia (11.7%) and hypertension (13%) despite an obese average body mass index (BMI) of 35.3 ± 1.7 kg/m2. Conclusion Lipedema is a painful psychologically distressing fat disorder, more foe than friend especially due to associated obesity and lymphedema. More controlled studies are needed to study the mechanisms and treatments for lipedema.
Keyphrases
- adipose tissue
- insulin resistance
- weight loss
- metabolic syndrome
- type diabetes
- body mass index
- healthcare
- weight gain
- cardiovascular disease
- blood pressure
- high fat diet
- systematic review
- fatty acid
- physical activity
- mental health
- left ventricular
- depressive symptoms
- polycystic ovary syndrome
- heart failure
- bariatric surgery
- machine learning
- case report
- obese patients
- high fat diet induced
- minimally invasive
- big data
- atrial fibrillation
- data analysis