Peripheral Edema


Peripheral edema is a very common finding in daily medical practice both in outpatient and inpatient settings. It can vary from benign condition to serious medical conditions, including congestive heart failure, liver failure, and kidney failure. This activity reviews the evaluation and treatment of peripheral edema and highlights the role of the interprofessional team in evaluating and treating patients with this condition.

Objectives:

  • Describe the causes of peripheral edema.
  • Outline the evaluation that should be completed on a patient with peripheral edema.
  • Summarize the management of peripheral edema.
  • Explain the importance of coordination of care of the interprofessional team in caring for patients with peripheral edema.

Introduction

Fluid compartments in the human body are divided between the intracellular and extracellular spaces. The extracellular space constitutes about one-third of total body water, which is further divided into intravascular plasma volume (25%) and the extravascular interstitial space (75%). The fluid balance between these compartments is maintained by hydrostatic pressures and oncotic pressures described by Starling. The other two factors that play an important role in fluid balance are vessel wall permeability and the lymphatic system. The lymphatic system collects fluid and filtered proteins from the interstitial space and returns that back to the vasculature. Any disturbance in this delicate homeostasis that results in net filtration out of the vascular space or impaired return of fluid by lymphatics leads to the accumulation of fluid in the interstitial space that is called edema. Edema can affect any part of the body and ranges from local swelling to full-blown anasarca, depending on the underlying pathology. A classic example of local swelling is an insect bite. An example of anasarca can be seen in nephrotic syndrome.[1]

Edema, other than localized edema, does not become clinically apparent until the interstitial volume has increased by 2.5 to 3 liters because the tissues constituting the interstitium can easily accommodate several liters of fluid. Therefore, a patient’s weight may increase by nearly 10% before pitting edema is evident.

Etiology

Causes of peripheral edema can be divided depending on the underlying mechanism as below.[2]

Increased Capillary Hydrostatic Pressure

Regional venous hypertension (often unilateral)

  • Deep vein thrombosis
  • Compartment syndrome
  • Chronic venous insufficiency

Systemic venous hypertension (often bilateral)

  • Heart failure
  • Pericarditis
  • Pulmonary hypertension
  • Liver failure/cirrhosis  

Increased plasma volume

  • Pregnancy
  • Premenstrual edema
  • Renal failure
  • Heart failure
  • Drugs

Decrease Plasma Oncotic Pressure

Protein loss

  • Nephrotic syndrome
  • Preeclampsia/eclampsia

Reduced protein synthesis

  • Malnutrition/malabsorption
  • Liver failure/cirrhosis
  • Vitamin deficiencies

Increased Capillary Permeability

  • Burns
  • Insect bites
  • Cellulitis
  • Allergic reactions

Lymphatic Obstruction

  • Filariasis
  • Malignancy involving lymph nodes leading to obstruction
  • Postsurgical after lymphadenectomy/radiation

Others

  • Myxedema in hypothyroidism
  • Lipedema
  • Idiopathic

Epidemiology

The most common cause of peripheral edema in patients over 50 yrs of age is venous insufficiency and related to aging, but many other underlying comorbid conditions like heart failure, renal failure, liver failure, and trauma can affect any age group. Peripheral edema can also be commonly observed in pregnancy.

Pathophysiology

The two basic steps involved in edema formation are alterations in the capillary hemodynamics that favors the leakage of fluid from the vascular compartment into the interstitium and renal retention of sodium and water by the kidneys via the renin-angiotensin-aldosterone system as a compensatory mechanism. Any systemic or local venous obstruction or expansion in plasma volume leads to an increase in the hydrostatic pressure that predisposes to edema. As normal body plasma is only about 3 liters, the diffusion of large amounts of water and electrolytes into the interstitial compartment compels the renal retention of sodium and water to maintain intravascular volume and hemodynamic stability. Effective intravascular volume depletion that occurs in congestive heart failure, liver cirrhosis initiates a neurohumoral cascade to maintain effective circulating volume. This cascade works via renal vasoconstriction, reducing glomerular filtration, increases sodium reabsorption proximally mediated by angiotensin II and norepinephrine, and increases sodium and water reabsorption in the collecting tubules mediated by aldosterone and antidiuretic hormone. Additionally, endothelium-derived factors like nitric oxide and prostaglandins further limit sodium and water excretion, therefore, promoting edema.[2]

The major contributor to maintaining intravascular oncotic pressure is due to impermeant proteins, mainly albumin. Albumin is essential for maintaining plasma oncotic pressure, and a level below 2 g/dl of plasma often results in edema. Hypoproteinemia can occur in many conditions, including nephrotic syndrome, severe nutritional deficiency, and severe liver disease in which hepatic synthetic function is impaired. Some medications, like calcium channel blockers, especially dihydropyridines, are more notorious, causing peripheral edema due to more selective arteriolar vasodilatation. Other uncommon conditions are myxedema, lymphedema, and idiopathic edema. Myxedema occurs in hypothyroidism, causing more often localized edema of the eyelids, face, and hands. There is an accumulation of mucopolysaccharides and proteins in the interstitium due to an increase in capillary permeability followed by sodium and water, but the exact pathophysiology in myxedema is not fully understood. Lymphedema is caused by impaired lymphatic transport leading to the accumulation of lymphatic fluid in the interstitium mostly in extremities.[3] Idiopathic edema is poorly understood that primarily affects premenopausal women. The key features are periodic episodes of edema in hands, legs, and abdominal bloating that are not clearly related to the menstrual cycle. By definition, it is a diagnosis of exclusion. It is most common in the third and fourth decades of life. Psychologic and emotional disturbances can exacerbate this condition.

History and Physical

The history and physical is very important because of a wide range of differential diagnoses in peripheral edema. Therefore, the timing of the edema, any changes with position, whether it is unilateral or bilateral, medication history, and evaluation for systemic diseases, are very crucial. Acute swelling of the limb within 72 hours is more common in deep venous thrombosis (DVT), cellulitis, acute injury from trauma, or recent initiation of new medications like calcium channel blockers. The chronic accumulation of more generalized edema over days, weeks, and months is usually due to underlying systemic conditions like congestive heart failure (CHF), liver disease, and renal disease. Dependent edema is more common in venous insufficiency that usually improves with elevation and worsens with dependency. Edema due to a decrease in plasma oncotic pressure like malabsorption, liver failure, the nephrotic syndrome does not change much with the position. Unilateral edema suggests local insults like DVT, cellulitis, venous obstruction, or lymphatic obstruction from tumor and radiation treatment. On the other hand, bilateral edema suggests systemic diseases such as CHF, liver failure, kidney disease, or severe malabsorption syndromes.[4]

The detailed physical exam can help immensely to differentiate systemic causes such as CHF (common findings are jugular venous distension, dyspnea, bilateral crackles, history of heart disease), liver disease (jaundice, ascites, history of hepatitis, and alcohol use disorder), renal disease (proteinuria, oliguria, history of uncontrolled diabetes and hypertension), thyroid disease (fatigue, anemia, weight gain). Edema should be assessed for pitting, tenderness, and skin changes. Also, in the early stages of lymphedema, pitting occurs due to an influx of protein-rich fluid into the interstitium before fibrosis of the subcutaneous tissue; therefore, lymphedema should be considered in the differential in pitting edema. Tenderness is common in cellulitis and DVT, while edema in systemic diseases like CHF, renal, and liver disease is usually nontender. Acute DVT and cellulitis can increase the temperature of the skin over the affected area due to the activation of cellular and humoral factors. Chronic venous insufficiency is often associated with brawny reddish texture due to the deposition of hemosiderin. In later stages, patients can develop venous ulcers that may progress to deep, weeping erosions.[5] Myxedema, due to hypothyroidism, presents with generalized thick skin with yellow to orange discoloration associated with nonpitting periorbital edema.[6] In lipedema, which is a pathologic accumulation of adipose tissue in the extremities, the feet are generally spared.

Evaluation

Initial efforts in the workup should focus on excluding major systemic causes, including heart failure, liver failure, and kidney failure. Therefore, a thorough history and physical examination are very important to minimize unnecessary testing. If systemic causes are suspected, for example, in CHF, chest radiography, EKG, serum brain natriuretic peptide (BNP) should be checked. Depending on these tests, echocardiography can be obtained for further evaluation.[7] In renal disease, the basic metabolic profile, including serum creatinine and urinalysis to check proteinuria, are the basic laboratory tests. Renal ultrasound can be obtained if suspicion for renal disease is high to rule out intrinsic disease.[8] In liver disease, start with liver function tests and albumin followed by a liver ultrasound if suspicion is high or abnormal labs.[9] If hypothyroidism is suspected, then thyroid function tests followed by ultrasound are obtained if necessary. Doppler ultrasonography is the modality of choice if suspicion for DVT is high. It can also be used to confirm the diagnosis of chronic venous insufficiency. Refer to the flow chart for evaluation and work up below.

Treatment / Management

Treatment should be guided by an underlying condition that predisposes to the formation of edema.[10] Diuretics are the treatment of choice in CHF, liver, and renal disease. Loop diuretics are usually the most effective, but several doses are required daily because of their short half-life. Patients with cirrhosis often have secondary hyperaldosteronism; therefore, spironolactone is the first choice of diuretic therapy along with furosemide.[11] However, rapid diuresis should be avoided in cirrhotic patients, especially in those without much peripheral edema, to avoid hepatorenal syndrome and hemodynamic collapse in already low intravascular fluid volume. If needed, paracentesis can be performed to reduce the need for a high dose of diuretics and to avoid electrolyte imbalance. In patients with DVT, anticoagulation therapy either with low molecular weight heparin or newer anticoagulants like rivaroxaban or apixaban are used.[12] Currently, warfarin is not used much because of less risk of bleeding with newer anticoagulants.[13] Also, in addition to anticoagulation, compression stockings should be used to prevent post-thrombotic syndrome.[14] In patients with chronic venous insufficiency, mechanical therapies, including leg elevation and compression stockings, are effective. Compression therapy is contraindicated in peripheral arterial disease because it can compromise blood supply further. In lymphedema, treatment involves complex decongestive physiotherapy that is composed of manual lymphatic massage and multilayer bandages. Maintenance therapy includes compression stockings and pneumatic compression devices. In patients where medications are the offending agent, they should be discontinued if possible and switch to a different class.

Differential Diagnosis

Following are the differential diagnosis of peripheral edema:

  • Congestive heart failure: Decreased cardiac out or ejection fraction leads to pulmonary and peripheral venous congestion resulting in pulmonary edema and peripheral edema, respectively. Edema is bilateral and symmetric. 
  • Hepatic disease: Bilateral edema caused by portal vein congestion leading to an increase in capillary permeability and a decrease in plasma oncotic pressure due to a decrease in the synthesis of albumin by the liver.
  • Renal disease: Bilateral edema caused by protein loss, especially albumin such as nephrotic syndrome and an increase in plasma volume due to renal retention and activation of neurohumoral factors.
  • Venous insufficiency: Usually, bilateral edema caused by the failure of venous return secondary to chronic deep venous system damage and/or incompetence.
  • Deep vein thrombus: Usually acute in nature and unilateral caused by obstruction of deep veins
  • Lymphedema: Chronic often following lymphatic obstruction from trauma or surgery. Another common cause in developing countries is filariasis. Location can be upper or lower extremities depending on the underlying cause.
  • Myxedema: Soft tissue edema in patients with severe and advanced hypothyroidism. It is typically associated with other hypothyroid features such as bradycardia, constipation, and weight gain.
  • Angioedema and urticaria: Secondary to allergic reactions such as bug bites, medications.
  • Cellulitis: Edema with signs of infection like fever, elevated white blood cell count. Most common in patients who are obese and chronic medical conditions like diabetes mellitus.
  • Lipedema: Chronic, begins around or after puberty. Predominantly involves thighs, legs, buttocks. Spares feet, ankles, and torso.
  • Medication-induced: Onset is weeks after the start of medication. Soft, pitting edema resolves within days after stopping the offending medication.[15]
  • Obstructive sleep apnea: Chronic secondary to pulmonary hypertension. Patients will usually have daytime fatigue, snoring, and obesity.[16]

Prognosis

Peripheral edema is a common manifestation of multiple disease entities ranging from advanced heart failure, liver disease to localized swelling from an allergic reaction. Therefore prognosis depends upon the underlying disease process.

Complications

Peripheral edema may be a warning sign for many systemic diseases and if not treated early leads to high morbidity and mortality. The most important diseases to rule out are heart disease, liver disease, and kidney disease. Therefore, detailed history and physical followed by relevant testing are very essential in these patients to decrease the complications.

Deterrence and Patient Education

Patient education is very crucial in peripheral edema as in other diseases. In congestive heart failure, a low salt diet is one of the most important parts of management, along with diuretic therapy. Generally speaking, patients should be educated regarding healthy lifestyles such as exercise, diet, and routine check-ups to diagnose underlying disease entities early and prevent long-term complications.

Enhancing Healthcare Team Outcomes

Peripheral edema can poses a diagnostic dilemma to family physicians due to a wide range of underlying diseases. As discussed above in detail, the causes of edema may be due to a myriad of diagnoses, including heart, liver, renal, thyroid, and other vascular etiologies. Therefore, initial efforts in work-up should focus on ruling out any major organ system failure as the underlying etiology. If the systemic disease is suspected, then it is essential to consult with an interprofessional team of specialists that includes a cardiologist, gastroenterologist, nephrologist, and so forth, depending upon underlying disease suspicion. The nurses are also vital members of the interprofessional group as they will monitor the patient’s daily progress, especially when the patient is on diuretics by monitoring daily weights, fluid input, and output. If the patient is on antibiotics or anticoagulants, then the pharmacist will ensure that the patient is on the right dosage and no underlying allergy to that specific medicine. The current recommendations have been developed after an exhaustive review of current medical literature from peer-reviewed journals and book chapters to determine the appropriateness of diagnosis and treatment.

The outcomes of edema depend on the cause. Therefore, to improve outcomes, prompt consultation with an interprofessional group of specialists is very important to prevent complications.

References

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Trayes KP, Studdiford JS, Pickle S, Tully AS. Edema: diagnosis and management. Am Fam Physician. 2013 Jul 15;88(2):102-10. [PubMed]3.

Ely JW, Osheroff JA, Chambliss ML, Ebell MH. Approach to leg edema of unclear etiology. J Am Board Fam Med. 2006 Mar-Apr;19(2):148-60. [PubMed]4.

Shah MG, Cho S, Atwood JE, Heidenreich PA. Peripheral edema due to heart disease: diagnosis and outcome. Clin Cardiol. 2006 Jan;29(1):31-5. [PMC free article] [PubMed]5.

Hyder ON, Soukas PA. Chronic Venous Insufficiency: Novel Management Strategies for an Under-diagnosed Disease Process. R I Med J (2013). 2017 May 01;100(5):37-39. [PubMed]6.

Milkau M, Sayk F. [Thyroid Storm and Myxedema Coma]. Dtsch Med Wochenschr. 2018 Mar;143(6):397-405. [PubMed]7.

Bestetti RB, Cardinalli-Neto A, Couto LB. The history of the evolution of the knowledge about the diagnosis and the pathogenetic aspects of heart failure: From the Egyptians to James Mackenzie. Int J Cardiol. 2020 Apr 01;304:109-115. [PubMed]8.

Nephrotic Syndrome. Am Fam Physician. 2016 Mar 15;93(6):Online. [PubMed]9.

Mengi S, Phelps L, Silva TSCD, Ludman A. Clinical examination remains crucial to the correct diagnosis: a case of severe peripheral oedema referred for investigation of heart failure. BMJ Case Rep. 2019 Aug 01;12(7) [PMC free article] [PubMed]10.

Cho S, Atwood JE. Peripheral edema. Am J Med. 2002 Nov;113(7):580-6. [PubMed]11.

Tsochatzis EA, Bosch J, Burroughs AK. Liver cirrhosis. Lancet. 2014 May 17;383(9930):1749-61. [PubMed]12.

Thachil J. Deep vein thrombosis. Hematology. 2014 Jul;19(5):309-10. [PubMed]13.

Almutairi AR, Zhou L, Gellad WF, Lee JK, Slack MK, Martin JR, Lo-Ciganic WH. Effectiveness and Safety of Non-vitamin K Antagonist Oral Anticoagulants for Atrial Fibrillation and Venous Thromboembolism: A Systematic Review and Meta-analyses. Clin Ther. 2017 Jul;39(7):1456-1478.e36. [PubMed]14.

Kahn SR, Galanaud JP, Vedantham S, Ginsberg JS. Guidance for the prevention and treatment of the post-thrombotic syndrome. J Thromb Thrombolysis. 2016 Jan;41(1):144-53. [PMC free article] [PubMed]15.

Makani H, Bangalore S, Romero J, Htyte N, Berrios RS, Makwana H, Messerli FH. Peripheral edema associated with calcium channel blockers: incidence and withdrawal rate–a meta-analysis of randomized trials. J Hypertens. 2011 Jul;29(7):1270-80. [PubMed]16.

Veasey SC, Rosen IM. Obstructive Sleep Apnea in Adults. N Engl J Med. 2019 Apr 11;380(15):1442-1449. [PubMed]

Source: PubMed

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