Abstract
Lympho-venous anastomoses (LVA) were performed in 30 patients, immediately after the completion of ilio-inguinal dissection for metastatic nodal involvement. This surgical procedure, originally devised to treat post-mastectomy lymphedema from radical mastectomy, was intended in this series of cases to prevent complications from ilio-inguinal nodal dissection. Actually, when compared to another group of 84 patients previously operated on by ilioinguinal nodal dissection without lympho-venous anastomoses, the series showed a lower rate of local-regional complications (38% vs 65.9%). The mean duration of hospital stay was also reduced (18.5 vs 34.7 days). Distant lymphedema of the lower limb was observed in 7 of 23 patients who had received LVA, whereas in the control group, lymphedema was recorded in 39 of 52 patients who were regularly followed-up (30% vs 75%). LVA should be routinely used, as a useful surgical procedure, to prevent or reduce the occurrence of local-regional complications following ilio-inguinal nodal dissections.
Get full access to this article
View all access options for this article.
