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Professional Reference articles are designed for health professionals to use. They are written by UK doctors and based on research evidence, UK and European Guidelines. You may find the Swollen legs article more useful, or one of our other مقالاتنا الصحية.

Leg swelling must never be assumed to be due to peripheral oedema. A definite diagnosis of the underlying cause of leg swelling must be made and a careful history and examination, along with appropriate confirmatory tests, are essential. Swelling of the legs may be either unilateral or bilateral:

  • Bilateral swelling is usually due to systemic conditions (eg, cardiac failure) and unilateral is often due to local trauma, venous disease or lymphatic disease.

  • Unilateral leg swelling is more often due to local causes (eg, deep vein thrombosis or cellulitis). However, bilateral swelling from systemic causes may be much more obvious on one side than the other and therefore can appear to be unilateral swelling.

See the related separate Peripheral oedema article for more details about causes, assessment and management of oedema.

تابع القراءة أدناه

Causes of swollen legs (aetiology)1 2

The most common cause of swelling of the legs is peripheral oedema, which is excessive accumulation of fluid in the interstitial space; however, any tissue of the legs can be swollen. There are therefore a large number of potential causes of swollen legs.

Localised causes of swollen legs

Systemic causes of swollen legs

The nature of the presentation will give essential clues in establishing the diagnosis. Establish if the swelling is:

  • Acute or chronic.

  • Unilateral or bilateral.

  • Acute or chronic (speed of onset).

  • Painful or not painful.

A careful history and examination will establish if there are associated symptoms or signs - for example:

  • Orthopnoea, paroxysmal nocturnal dyspnoea: heart failure.

  • Diarrhoea or other bowel dysfunction: protein-losing enteropathy.

  • Painful swollen calf: deep vein thrombosis or inflammation - eg, cellulitis, osteomyelitis.

  • Pigmentation: venous insufficiency.

  • Immobility.

  • Pelvic mass or pregnancy.

تابع القراءة أدناه

The diagnosis may often be clear without the need for further tests. The choice of initial tests will depend on the differential diagnosis based on clinical assessment. Potential initial investigations include:

  • Urinalysis: proteinuria suggests renal cause.

  • FBC: high white cell count in infection; anaemia.

  • Biochemistry: renal function and electrolytes (raised creatinine in renal disease); LFTs (impaired liver function and associated low albumin); glucose (infection associated with diabetes); TFTs (hypothyroidism).

  • Clotting screen: abnormal clotting associated with spontaneous haematoma.

  • CXR: pulmonary oedema.

  • D-dimer blood test: D-dimers are products of fibrin degradation and are raised in patients with venous thromboembolism. Sensitivity of the test is high but specificity is poor.

  • ECG: heart failure.

  • Ultrasound, CT scan: haematoma, tumour, abdominal or pelvic mass.

  • Duplex Doppler, venography: deep vein thrombosis, arteriovenous fistula.

Further investigations may include:

Management is directed at identification and treatment of the underlying cause.

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قراءة إضافية ومراجع

  1. Trayes KP, Studdiford JS, Pickle S, et al; Edema: diagnosis and management. Am Fam Physician. 2013 Jul 15;88(2):102-10.
  2. Gorman WP, Davis KR, Donnelly R; ABC of arterial and venous disease. Swollen lower limb-1: general assessment and deep vein thrombosis. BMJ. 2000 May 27;320(7247):1453-6.
  3. Shikino K, Ikusaka M; Primary lymphoedema. BMJ Case Rep. 2018 Jul 30;2018. pii: bcr-2018-225843. doi: 10.1136/bcr-2018-225843.
  4. Chiu TW; Management of secondary lymphoedema. Hong Kong Med J. 2014 Dec;20(6):519-28. doi: 10.12809/hkmj134116. Epub 2014 Aug 29.
  5. Shavit E, Wollina U, Alavi A; Lipoedema is not lymphoedema: A review of current literature. Int Wound J. 2018 Dec;15(6):921-928. doi: 10.1111/iwj.12949. Epub 2018 Jun 29.

تابع القراءة أدناه

About the authorView full bio

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الدكتور دوغ مكيتشني، MRCGP

Medical Writer

MA, MBBS, MSc, DRCOG, MRCP(UK), MRCGP(2021), FHEA

Dr Doug McKechnie is an NHS GP working in London. He works full-time clinically and is also the Deputy Lead for the Clinical and Professional Practice module at University College London Medical School.

About the reviewerView full bio

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الدكتورة فيليبا فينسنت، MRCGP

General Practitioner, Medical Author

MB BS, Bsc, MRCGP (2000), DCH, DFSRH, DRCOG

الدكتورة Philippa Vincent is an NHS GP working in North London.

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