Phlegmasia alba dolens

Phlegmasia alba dolens
Classification and external resources
Specialty cardiology
ICD-10 I80.1
ICD-9-CM 451.11
DiseasesDB 32484

Phlegmasia alba dolens (also colloquially known as milk leg or white leg) is part of a spectrum of diseases related to deep vein thrombosis. Historically, it was commonly seen during pregnancy and in mothers who have just given birth. In cases of pregnancy, it is most often seen during the third trimester, resulting from a compression of the left common iliac vein against the pelvic rim by the enlarged uterus. Today, this disease is most commonly (40% of the time) related to some form of underlying malignancy. Hypercoagulability (a propensity to clot formation) is a well-known state that occurs in many cancer states. The incidence of this disease is not well reported.

The disease presumably begins with a deep vein thrombosis that progresses to total occlusion of the deep venous system. It is at this stage that it is called phlegmasia alba dolens. It is a sudden (acute) process. The leg, then, must rely on the superficial venous system for drainage. The superficial system is not adequate to handle the large volume of blood being delivered to the leg via the arterial system. The result is edema, pain and a white appearance (alba) of the leg.

The next step in the disease progression is occlusion of the superficial venous system, thereby preventing all venous outflow from the extremity. At this stage it is called phlegmasia cerulea dolens. The leg becomes more swollen and increasingly more painful. Additionally, the edema and loss of venous outflow impedes the arterial inflow. Ischemia with progression to gangrene are potential consequences. Phlegmasia alba dolens is distinguished, clinically, from phlegmasia cerulea dolens in that there is no ischemia.[1]

Etymology

Phlegmasia alba dolens literally means "painful white edema".[2] It received the name "milk leg" because it was once thought to be caused by the metastasis of milk.[3]

References

  1. Gregoire, R. La Phlebite bleue (Phlegmasia Cerulea Dolens). 1938;48:1313-15.
  2. Dieulafoy, Paul Georges (1912). A Text-book of Medicine. D. Appleton & Co. p. 488.
  3. Wright, Adam Henry (1905). A Text-book of Obstetrics. D. Appleton & Co. p. 473.


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