Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4121804 Journal of Plastic, Reconstructive & Aesthetic Surgery 2007 5 Pages PDF
Abstract

SummaryImpaired lymph drainage is an inevitable consequence of any form of surgery that disrupts lymphatics, resulting in a degree of lymphoedema that may vary from subtle to dramatic and although classically involving an entire limb, may be more localised, confined to only a small area such as a skin flap. Infection is a well-recognised complication of lymphoedema. However, not all inflammatory episodes occurring in the setting of lymphatic dysfunction can be clearly attributed to infection as this article demonstrates. Five patients presented over a 5-year period with distinctive erysipelas-like inflammation affecting the breast which occurred several weeks following reduction mammaplasty in four patients and breast reconstruction in one patient. No clinical response was obtained with standard antibiotics. This inflammatory problem may represent a previously unreported complication of breast surgery with an incidence of 4% following reduction mammaplasty. Recent research supports the notion that this type of episode is most likely to be due to a non-infective inflammatory process related to lymphatic dysfunction induced by surgery.

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