RESUMO
O presente estudo objetivou avaliar a drenagem linfática como forma coadjuvante de tratamento, em uma paciente idosa com dermatofibrose, flebite de membro inferior e queixa de dores na perna, localizada em região pós-flebítica. Foi realizado tratamento clínico inicial por três meses com drogas venotônicas (diosmin), anti-inflamatórios, analgésicos e repouso, porém com pouca melhora clínica. Foi, então, associada ao tratamento clínico, a drenagem linfática manual e mecânica. Os resultados obtidos incluíram a redução dos sintomas dolorosos e da hiperpigmentação do local acometido. Este trabalho sugere que a drenagem linfática obteve melhora do quadro clínico de paciente portadora de dermatofibrose, sugerindo novas pesquisas para caracterização mais específica dessa abordagem.
This study aimed at evaluating lymphatic drainage as a complementary form of treatment in an elderly patient with dermatofibrosis and phlebitis of the lower limb. The patient complained of pain in the post-phlebitic region. Initially three months of clinical treatment was performed using vasotonic(diosmine), anti-inflammatory and analgesic drugs and the patient was told to rest. However this treatment was not very effective. Manual and mechanical lymph drainage was associated to the clinical treatment. The results gave a significant improvement in the symptoms and the hyperpigmentation of the affected area. This study suggests that lymph drainage obtained improves the clinical of patient with dermatofibrosis, suggesting new research for more specific characterization of this approach.
Assuntos
Humanos , Feminino , Idoso , Edema/terapia , Fibrose/complicações , Fibrose/terapia , Flebite/complicações , Flebite/diagnóstico , Flebite/patologia , Doenças Linfáticas/diagnóstico , Doenças Linfáticas/terapiaRESUMO
This study investigated the curative effects of notoginseny cream versus Hirudoid cream in the treatment of postinfusion phlebitis. Sixty-five patients who received peripheral infusion therapy during a 20-month period and had developed phlebitis were divided randomly into two groups. Group A was treated with notoginseny cream, a topical Chinese medicine developed and produced by the pharmacological department of The Second Affiliated Hospital of Sun Yat-Sen University. Group B was treated with heparinoid cream (Hirudoid, a commercial product from Germany). Significantly fewer applications of notoginseny cream were required to bring about the disappearance of signs and symptoms of phlebitis in the group A patients as compared with the group B patients for the same effect. The actual time of disappearance of the signs and symptoms of phlebitis also were significantly shorter in patients treated with notoginseny cream than with heparinoid cream.