TY - JOUR
T1 - Chronic leg oedema, ulceration and heart failure
T2 - a potentially deadly and often neglected combination
AU - Johansen, Mette Niemann
AU - Jemec, Gregor Borut Ernst
AU - Lindholm, Matias Greve
PY - 2025/4/1
Y1 - 2025/4/1
N2 - Chronic leg ulceration may often be accompanied and exacerbated by the presence of oedema, a common health problem that can cause ulceration, which if left untreated can require amputation. Current clinical consensus indicates compression as the recommended treatment for oedema. While cardiac function is also known to influence oedema, it is rarely considered a parameter of wound management. This article presents a case study of a patient with oedema and ulceration, who avoided a scheduled amputation when lesions healed following the optimisation of cardiac function. The patient had right-sided heart failure with preserved ejection fraction. After fluid drainage, the ulcers began to heal. The case raises the question of cardiac optimisation of leg ulcer patients. This case highlights the potential role of cardiac management in leg ulcer treatment and raises an important question: should cardiac optimisation be a greater consideration in the care of patients with leg ulcers? The prevailing emphasis on compression therapy may benefit from reassessment, with particular attention to the role of cardiac function in wound healing.
AB - Chronic leg ulceration may often be accompanied and exacerbated by the presence of oedema, a common health problem that can cause ulceration, which if left untreated can require amputation. Current clinical consensus indicates compression as the recommended treatment for oedema. While cardiac function is also known to influence oedema, it is rarely considered a parameter of wound management. This article presents a case study of a patient with oedema and ulceration, who avoided a scheduled amputation when lesions healed following the optimisation of cardiac function. The patient had right-sided heart failure with preserved ejection fraction. After fluid drainage, the ulcers began to heal. The case raises the question of cardiac optimisation of leg ulcer patients. This case highlights the potential role of cardiac management in leg ulcer treatment and raises an important question: should cardiac optimisation be a greater consideration in the care of patients with leg ulcers? The prevailing emphasis on compression therapy may benefit from reassessment, with particular attention to the role of cardiac function in wound healing.
KW - Humans
KW - Leg Ulcer/complications
KW - Heart Failure/complications
KW - Edema/complications
KW - Chronic Disease
KW - Wound Healing
KW - Male
KW - Aged
KW - Compression Bandages
KW - Female
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=105002540084&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.12968/bjcn.2024.0149
DO - 10.12968/bjcn.2024.0149
M3 - Journal article
C2 - 40162823
SN - 1462-4753
VL - 30
SP - S14-S17
JO - British Journal of Community Nursing
JF - British Journal of Community Nursing
IS - Sup4
ER -