Physical Therapy in Women with Early Stage Lipedema: Potential Impact of Multimodal Manual Therapy, Compression, Exercise, and Education Interventions
Resource type
Authors/contributors
- Donahue, Paula M. C. (Author)
- Crescenzi, Rachelle (Author)
- Petersen, Kalen J. (Author)
- Garza, Maria (Author)
- Patel, Niral (Author)
- Lee, Chelsea (Author)
- Chen, Sheau-Chiann (Author)
- Donahue, Manus J. (Author)
Title
Physical Therapy in Women with Early Stage Lipedema: Potential Impact of Multimodal Manual Therapy, Compression, Exercise, and Education Interventions
Abstract
Background: Lipedema is a distinct adipose disorder from obesity necessitating awareness as well as different management approaches to address pain and optimize quality of life (QoL). The purpose of this proof-of-principle study is to evaluate the therapeutic potential of physical therapy interventions in women with lipedema. Methods and Results: Participants with Stage 1-2 lipedema and early Stage 0-1 lymphedema (n = 5, age = 38.4 ± 13.4 years, body mass index = 27.2 ± 4.3 kg/m2) underwent nine visits of physical therapy in 6 weeks for management of symptoms impacting functional mobility and QoL. Pre- and post-therapy, participants were scanned with 3 Tesla sodium and water magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), underwent biophysical measurements, and completed questionnaires measuring function and QoL (patient-specific functional scale, PSFS, and RAND-36). Pain was measured at each visit using the 0-10 visual analog scale (VAS). Treatment effect was calculated for all study variables. The primary symptomatology measures of pain and function revealed clinically significant post-treatment improvements and large treatment effects (Cohen's d for pain VAS = -2.5 and PSFS = 4.4). The primary sodium MRI measures, leg skin sodium, and subcutaneous adipose tissue (SAT) sodium, reduced following treatment and revealed large treatment effects (Cohen's d for skin sodium = -1.2 and SAT sodium = -0.9). Conclusions: This proof-of-principle study provides support that persons with lipedema can benefit from physical therapy to manage characteristic symptoms of leg pain and improve QoL. Objective MRI measurement of reduced tissue sodium in the skin and SAT regions indicates reduced inflammation in the treated limbs. Further research is warranted to optimize the conservative therapy approach in lipedema, a condition for which curative and disease-modifying treatments are unavailable.
Publication
Lymphatic Research and Biology
Volume
20
Issue
4
Pages
382-390
Date
2022-08
Journal Abbr
Lymphat Res Biol
Language
eng
ISSN
1557-8585
Short Title
Physical Therapy in Women with Early Stage Lipedema
Library Catalog
PubMed
Lipedema Foundation Award
LF12
Citation
Donahue, P. M. C., Crescenzi, R., Petersen, K. J., Garza, M., Patel, N., Lee, C., Chen, S.-C., & Donahue, M. J. (2022). Physical Therapy in Women with Early Stage Lipedema: Potential Impact of Multimodal Manual Therapy, Compression, Exercise, and Education Interventions. Lymphatic Research and Biology, 20(4), 382–390. https://doi.org/10.1089/lrb.2021.0039
Publication
Link to this record