Bilateral leg swelling: Difference between revisions
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== | ==Background== | ||
*Bilateral leg swelling (bilateral pedal edema) is a common ED complaint | |||
*Unlike unilateral swelling, bilateral edema usually indicates a systemic process | |||
*Most common cause is bilaeral pedal edema | |||
**Definition: excess fluid in the lower extremity resulting in swelling of the feet and extending upward | |||
**Further classified as pitting (compressible) and non-pitting | |||
*Key systemic causes to identify: [[congestive heart failure|heart failure]], [[cirrhosis]], [[nephrotic syndrome]], renal failure | |||
*Medication-related edema is common and often overlooked (calcium channel blockers, NSAIDs, gabapentin/pregabalin) | |||
{{Causes Pedal Edema}} | |||
==Clinical Features== | |||
===History=== | |||
*Onset and progression | |||
*Orthopnea, PND, dyspnea on exertion (heart failure) | |||
*Abdominal distension, jaundice, alcohol use (cirrhosis) | |||
*Foamy urine, periorbital edema (nephrotic syndrome) | |||
*Medication review: calcium channel blockers (especially amlodipine), NSAIDs, gabapentin/pregabalin, pioglitazone, corticosteroids | |||
*History of heart failure, liver disease, kidney disease, thyroid disease | |||
*Dietary history (salt intake) | |||
===Physical Exam=== | |||
[[File:PedalEdema.jpg|thumb|Pitting pedal edema]] | |||
*Assess degree and distribution of edema | |||
*Pitting vs. non-pitting | |||
**Pitting: heart failure, cirrhosis, nephrotic syndrome, medications, venous insufficiency | |||
**Non-pitting ("woody"): [[lymphedema]], [[pretibial myxedema]] (hypothyroidism), chronic venous changes | |||
*JVD (heart failure) | |||
*Lung crackles (pulmonary edema) | |||
*Hepatomegaly, ascites, spider angiomata, jaundice (cirrhosis) | |||
*S3 gallop, displaced PMI (heart failure) | |||
*Periorbital edema (nephrotic syndrome) | |||
*Skin changes: stasis dermatitis, hemosiderin staining (chronic venous insufficiency) | |||
==Differential Diagnosis== | |||
{{Bilateral pedal edema DDX}} | |||
==Evaluation== | |||
===Laboratory=== | |||
*[[CBC]] | |||
*[[BMP]] (renal function, electrolytes) | |||
*[[Albumin]] (low in cirrhosis, nephrotic syndrome, malnutrition) | |||
*[[UA]] with urine protein (nephrotic syndrome screening) | |||
*[[BNP]] or NT-proBNP (elevated in heart failure) | |||
*[[Liver function tests]] if hepatic cause suspected | |||
*[[TSH]] if hypothyroidism suspected | |||
*Lipid panel, 24-hour urine protein if nephrotic syndrome suspected | |||
===Imaging=== | |||
*[[CXR]]: cardiomegaly, pulmonary edema, pleural effusions | |||
*[[ECG]]: evaluate for ischemia, arrhythmia, chamber enlargement | |||
*Bedside [[POCUS]]: cardiac function (EF), IVC diameter (volume status), lung B-lines (pulmonary edema), pleural effusion | |||
*[[Echocardiography]] if new heart failure suspected | |||
*Consider [[DVT ultrasound]] if asymmetry or concern for bilateral DVT (rare but possible with IVC thrombus or bilateral iliac disease) | |||
*Abdominal ultrasound if cirrhosis or hepatic cause suspected | |||
===Diagnosis=== | |||
*Idiopathic edema is a diagnosis of exclusion, must first rule out CHF, cirrhosis, renal failure, nephrotic syndrome, chronic venous insufficiency, and medication-induced edema<ref>Kay A, Davis CL. Idiopathic Edema. American Journal of Kidney Disease. 1999; 34(3): 405-408.</ref> | |||
==Management== | |||
===General=== | |||
*Treat underlying cause | |||
*Sodium restriction | |||
*Leg elevation | |||
*Compression stockings for chronic venous insufficiency | |||
===Heart Failure=== | |||
*See [[Congestive heart failure|CHF]] for detailed management | |||
*IV [[furosemide]] for acute decompensation with pulmonary edema | |||
*[[Nitroglycerin]] for preload reduction if hypertensive | |||
== | ===Cirrhosis=== | ||
*Sodium restriction, [[spironolactone]] +/- [[furosemide]] | |||
*See [[Ascites]] management | |||
===Nephrotic Syndrome=== | |||
*Loop diuretics, sodium restriction | |||
*Nephrology consultation | |||
===Medication-Induced=== | |||
*Identify and discontinue or reduce offending agent if possible | |||
*Idiopathic pedal edema need not be treated with diuretics | |||
==Disposition== | |||
===Admit=== | |||
*New diagnosis of heart failure | |||
*Acute decompensated heart failure | |||
*Respiratory compromise from volume overload | |||
*Acute renal failure | |||
*New diagnosis of cirrhosis with complications | |||
*Concerning laboratory findings (severe hypoalbuminemia, elevated creatinine, new anemia) | |||
===Discharge=== | |||
*Chronic stable edema with known cause | |||
*Medication-induced edema with plan for medication change | |||
*Chronic venous insufficiency | |||
*Patients should be followed up in outpatient clinic for further investigation and care | |||
*Return precautions: worsening swelling, shortness of breath, chest pain, decreased urine output, weight gain >2-3 lbs/day | |||
==See Also== | |||
*[[Unilateral leg swelling]] | |||
*[[Congestive heart failure]] | |||
*[[Cirrhosis]] | |||
*[[Nephrotic syndrome]] | |||
==External Links== | |||
*[http://ddxof.com/lower-extremity-edema/ DDxOf: Differential Diagnosis of Lower Extremity Edema] | |||
==References== | |||
<references/> | |||
[[Category:Cardiology]] | |||
[[Category:FEN]] | [[Category:FEN]] | ||
[[Category:Symptoms]] | |||
Latest revision as of 23:28, 20 March 2026
Background
- Bilateral leg swelling (bilateral pedal edema) is a common ED complaint
- Unlike unilateral swelling, bilateral edema usually indicates a systemic process
- Most common cause is bilaeral pedal edema
- Definition: excess fluid in the lower extremity resulting in swelling of the feet and extending upward
- Further classified as pitting (compressible) and non-pitting
- Key systemic causes to identify: heart failure, cirrhosis, nephrotic syndrome, renal failure
- Medication-related edema is common and often overlooked (calcium channel blockers, NSAIDs, gabapentin/pregabalin)
Causes of pedal edema
- Increased hydrostatic pressure
- Decreased oncotic pressure
- Increased capillary permeability
- Lymphatic obstruction
Clinical Features
History
- Onset and progression
- Orthopnea, PND, dyspnea on exertion (heart failure)
- Abdominal distension, jaundice, alcohol use (cirrhosis)
- Foamy urine, periorbital edema (nephrotic syndrome)
- Medication review: calcium channel blockers (especially amlodipine), NSAIDs, gabapentin/pregabalin, pioglitazone, corticosteroids
- History of heart failure, liver disease, kidney disease, thyroid disease
- Dietary history (salt intake)
Physical Exam
- Assess degree and distribution of edema
- Pitting vs. non-pitting
- Pitting: heart failure, cirrhosis, nephrotic syndrome, medications, venous insufficiency
- Non-pitting ("woody"): lymphedema, pretibial myxedema (hypothyroidism), chronic venous changes
- JVD (heart failure)
- Lung crackles (pulmonary edema)
- Hepatomegaly, ascites, spider angiomata, jaundice (cirrhosis)
- S3 gallop, displaced PMI (heart failure)
- Periorbital edema (nephrotic syndrome)
- Skin changes: stasis dermatitis, hemosiderin staining (chronic venous insufficiency)
Differential Diagnosis
Bilateral leg swelling
- Pedal edema
- Gravitational
- Venous insufficiency
- Thrombophlebitis
- Drugs
- CHF
- Lymphedema
- Renal failure
- Liver failure
- Pregnancy
- Heat edema
- Idiopathic
- Other
Evaluation
Laboratory
- CBC
- BMP (renal function, electrolytes)
- Albumin (low in cirrhosis, nephrotic syndrome, malnutrition)
- UA with urine protein (nephrotic syndrome screening)
- BNP or NT-proBNP (elevated in heart failure)
- Liver function tests if hepatic cause suspected
- TSH if hypothyroidism suspected
- Lipid panel, 24-hour urine protein if nephrotic syndrome suspected
Imaging
- CXR: cardiomegaly, pulmonary edema, pleural effusions
- ECG: evaluate for ischemia, arrhythmia, chamber enlargement
- Bedside POCUS: cardiac function (EF), IVC diameter (volume status), lung B-lines (pulmonary edema), pleural effusion
- Echocardiography if new heart failure suspected
- Consider DVT ultrasound if asymmetry or concern for bilateral DVT (rare but possible with IVC thrombus or bilateral iliac disease)
- Abdominal ultrasound if cirrhosis or hepatic cause suspected
Diagnosis
- Idiopathic edema is a diagnosis of exclusion, must first rule out CHF, cirrhosis, renal failure, nephrotic syndrome, chronic venous insufficiency, and medication-induced edema[1]
Management
General
- Treat underlying cause
- Sodium restriction
- Leg elevation
- Compression stockings for chronic venous insufficiency
Heart Failure
- See CHF for detailed management
- IV furosemide for acute decompensation with pulmonary edema
- Nitroglycerin for preload reduction if hypertensive
Cirrhosis
- Sodium restriction, spironolactone +/- furosemide
- See Ascites management
Nephrotic Syndrome
- Loop diuretics, sodium restriction
- Nephrology consultation
Medication-Induced
- Identify and discontinue or reduce offending agent if possible
- Idiopathic pedal edema need not be treated with diuretics
Disposition
Admit
- New diagnosis of heart failure
- Acute decompensated heart failure
- Respiratory compromise from volume overload
- Acute renal failure
- New diagnosis of cirrhosis with complications
- Concerning laboratory findings (severe hypoalbuminemia, elevated creatinine, new anemia)
Discharge
- Chronic stable edema with known cause
- Medication-induced edema with plan for medication change
- Chronic venous insufficiency
- Patients should be followed up in outpatient clinic for further investigation and care
- Return precautions: worsening swelling, shortness of breath, chest pain, decreased urine output, weight gain >2-3 lbs/day
See Also
External Links
References
- ↑ Kay A, Davis CL. Idiopathic Edema. American Journal of Kidney Disease. 1999; 34(3): 405-408.
