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      Lymphedema Leads to Fat Deposition in Muscle and Decreased Muscle/Water Volume After Liposuction: A Magnetic Resonance Imaging Study

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          Abstract

          Background: Lymphedema leads to adipose tissue deposition. Water–fat magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) can quantify and localize fat and water. The presence of excess fat and excess water/muscle in the subfascial compartment of the lymphedematous limb has not been investigated before. The aim of this study was to investigate epifascial and subfascial fat and water contents in patients with chronic lymphedema before and after liposuction.

          Methods and Results: Seven patients with arm lymphedema and six with leg lymphedema were operated on. The limbs were examined with water–fat MRI before liposuction (baseline) and at five time points. Complete reduction of the excess limb volumes was achieved. The excess epifascial fat was evident in the edematous limbs and a drop was seen following surgery. There were differences in excess water at all time points. At 1 year there was a decrease in excess water. Excess subfascial fat was seen in the edematous limbs at all time points. Subfascial excess water/muscle did not show any differences after surgery. However, starting from 3 months there was less subfascial water/muscle compared with baseline.

          Conclusions: Subfascial fat in the lymphedematous limbs did not change. In contrast, the water in the subfascial compartment was reduced over time, which may represent a decrease of muscle volume after treatment due to less mechanical load after liposuction. Using water–fat MRI-based fat quantification, the fat and water contents may be quantified and localized in the various compartments in lymphedema.

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          Most cited references38

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          Lymphatic vascular defects promoted by Prox1 haploinsufficiency cause adult-onset obesity.

          Multiple organs cooperate to regulate appetite, metabolism, and glucose and fatty acid homeostasis. Here, we identified and characterized lymphatic vasculature dysfunction as a cause of adult-onset obesity. We found that functional inactivation of a single allele of the homeobox gene Prox1 led to adult-onset obesity due to abnormal lymph leakage from mispatterned and ruptured lymphatic vessels. Prox1 heterozygous mice are a new model for adult-onset obesity and lymphatic vascular disease.
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            Multicoil Dixon chemical species separation with an iterative least-squares estimation method.

            This work describes a new approach to multipoint Dixon fat-water separation that is amenable to pulse sequences that require short echo time (TE) increments, such as steady-state free precession (SSFP) and fast spin-echo (FSE) imaging. Using an iterative linear least-squares method that decomposes water and fat images from source images acquired at short TE increments, images with a high signal-to-noise ratio (SNR) and uniform separation of water and fat are obtained. This algorithm extends to multicoil reconstruction with minimal additional complexity. Examples of single- and multicoil fat-water decompositions are shown from source images acquired at both 1.5T and 3.0T. Examples in the knee, ankle, pelvis, abdomen, and heart are shown, using FSE, SSFP, and spoiled gradient-echo (SPGR) pulse sequences. The algorithm was applied to systems with multiple chemical species, and an example of water-fat-silicone separation is shown. An analysis of the noise performance of this method is described, and methods to improve noise performance through multicoil acquisition and field map smoothing are discussed. Copyright 2003 Wiley-Liss, Inc.
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              Inflammation and race and gender differences in computerized tomography-measured adipose depots.

              A growing body of evidence has consistently shown a correlation between obesity and chronic subclinical inflammation. It is unclear whether the size of specific adipose depots is more closely associated with concentrations of inflammatory markers than overall adiposity. This study investigated the relationship between inflammatory markers and computerized tomography-derived abdominal visceral and subcutaneous fat and thigh intermuscular and subcutaneous fat in older white and black adults. Data were from 2,651 black and white men and women aged 70-79 years participating in the Health, Aging, and Body Composition (Health ABC) study. Inflammatory markers, interleukin-6 (IL-6), C-reactive protein (CRP), and tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) were obtained from serum samples. Abdominal visceral and subcutaneous fat and thigh intermuscular and subcutaneous fat were quantified on computerized tomography images. Linear regression analysis was used to evaluate the cross-sectional relationship between specific adipose depots and inflammatory markers in four race/gender groups. As expected, blacks have less visceral fat than whites and women less visceral fat than men. However, abdominal visceral adiposity was most consistently associated with significantly higher IL-6 and CRP concentrations in all race/gender groups (P < 0.05), even after controlling for general adiposity. Thigh intermuscular fat had an inconsistent but significant association with inflammation, and there was a trend toward lower inflammatory marker concentration with increasing thigh subcutaneous fat in white and black women. Despite the previously established differences in abdominal fat distribution across gender and race, visceral fat remained a significant predictor of inflammatory marker concentration across all four subgroups examined.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Lymphat Res Biol
                Lymphat Res Biol
                lrb
                Lymphatic Research and Biology
                Mary Ann Liebert, Inc. (140 Huguenot Street, 3rd FloorNew Rochelle, NY 10801USA )
                1539-6851
                1557-8585
                01 April 2018
                01 April 2018
                01 April 2018
                : 16
                : 2
                : 174-181
                Affiliations
                [ 1 ]Department of Clinical Sciences, Lund University , Malmö, Sweden.
                [ 2 ]Department of Surgery, Blekinge Hospital , Karlskrona, Sweden.
                [ 3 ]Medical Radiation Physics, Department of Translational Medicine, Lund University, Skåne University Hospital , Malmö, Sweden.
                [ 4 ]Department of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery, Skåne University Hospital , Malmö, Sweden.
                Author notes
                Address correspondence to: Mattias Hoffner, MD, Department of Surgery, Blekinge Hospital 371 85 Karlskrona, Sweden

                E-mail: mattias.hoffner@ 123456med.lu.se
                Article
                10.1089/lrb.2017.0042
                10.1089/lrb.2017.0042
                5906724
                28956970
                6b215482-364c-4c7b-9a94-2402aceba836
                © Hoffner et al., 2017; Published by Mary Ann Liebert, Inc.

                This Open Access article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons License ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly credited.

                History
                Page count
                Figures: 5, Tables: 1, References: 47, Pages: 8
                Categories
                Original Articles

                lymphedema,liposuction,adipose tissue,fat,mri,water–fat imaging

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