ULTRASONOGRAPHIC EVALUATION OF LOWER EXTREMITY SKIN AND SUBCUTANEOUS TISSUE WITH QUANTITATIVE ECHOGENICITY AND ELASTOGRAPHY IN LYMPHEDEMA, LIPEDEMA, AND HEALTHY CONTROL GROUPS: A CONTROLLED CLINICAL STUDY
The aim of this observational study is to evaluate the diagnostic value of multimodal ultrasonography in differentiating between lymphedema and lipedema. Differentiating these two chronic conditions based solely on clinical examination can be challenging due to overlapping symptoms. This study will utilize various non-invasive ultrasound techniques-including B-mode ultrasound, strain elastography, power Doppler, and quantitative ImageJ analysis-to compare tissue characteristics among patients with lymphedema, patients with lipedema, and healthy controls. The goal is to identify reliable, non-invasive imaging biomarkers that can facilitate early and accurate diagnosis, thereby optimizing patient management.
• Individuals aged 18 to 75 years.
• Clinical diagnosis of lower extremity lymphedema (for the lymphedema group).
• Clinical diagnosis of lower extremity lipedema (for the lipedema group).
• Healthy individuals with no history or clinical signs of chronic lower extremity edema (for the control group).