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Lipodermatosclerosis
Other Resources UpToDate PubMed

Lipodermatosclerosis

Contributors: Erin X. Wei MD, Patricia Ting MD, Ben Barankin MD, Belinda Tan MD, PhD, Susan Burgin MD
Other Resources UpToDate PubMed

Synopsis

Lipodermatosclerosis, also known as lipomembranous panniculitis, sclerosing panniculitis, venous liposclerosis, and hypodermitis sclerodermiformis, is an inflammation of subcutaneous fat, usually on the lower extremities, secondary to chronic venous insufficiency. It can be classified into acute, subacute, and chronic stages. Acute lipodermatosclerosis (ie, present for less than 1 month) appears as a localized, exquisitely tender, erythematous, indurated plaque, while subacute (1 month to 1 year) and chronic lipodermatosclerosis (more than 1 year) appear as a nontender, hyperpigmented, sclerotic plaque, which can contain venous ulcers. Advanced lipodermatosclerosis on the lower leg has the appearance of an "inverted champagne bottle," whereby the proximal leg is edematous from chronic venous stasis while the lower portion of the leg is atrophied and sclerotic from fat necrosis (or lipodystrophy) and scarred from chronic ulcerations.

In the United States, 6%-7% of the population aged older than 50 years has some form of chronic venous insufficiency. The incidence peaks in women aged 40-50 years and men aged 70-79 years. Risk factors include age, smoking, family history, preexisting varicose veins, previous trauma to the venous system (eg, vein stripping, nonsurgical trauma), hypercoagulable states (eg, protein C or S deficiency), history of deep vein thrombosis, obesity, and lifestyle choices (eg, standing occupations, sedentary lifestyle). Clinical features of chronic venous stasis include varicose veins, lower extremity edema, chronic aching pain from venous hypertension of muscle and fascial compartments, and, finally, progression to lipodermatosclerosis and the development of nonhealing ulcers.

The exact pathogenesis of lipodermatosclerosis is unknown. It is believed that venous disease (ie, venous hypertension, venous incompetence, etc) allows diffusion of capillary contents such as fibrinogen and other inflammatory mediators into the dermis. Fibrinogen is polymerized to fibrin, which forms a fibrin cuff around capillaries, leading to a relative hypoxic state. This is complicated by elevated proteolytic activity involving matrix metalloproteinases and fibrinolytic mediators from the plasminogen activating pathway, which degrades the collagen matrix, resulting in venous ulcers.

Codes

ICD10CM:
I83.10 – Varicose veins of unspecified lower extremity with inflammation

SNOMEDCT:
410016009 – Lipodermatosclerosis

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Last Reviewed:01/31/2021
Last Updated:01/31/2021
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Lipodermatosclerosis
A medical illustration showing key findings of Lipodermatosclerosis (Acute) : Erythema, Lower leg, Painful skin lesions
Clinical image of Lipodermatosclerosis - imageId=199728. Click to open in gallery.  caption: 'A depressed light brown and violaceous plaque of the lower leg, imparting a champagne-bottle-like appearance to the leg.'
A depressed light brown and violaceous plaque of the lower leg, imparting a champagne-bottle-like appearance to the leg.
Copyright © 2024 VisualDx®. All rights reserved.