Lymphangitis

The printable version is no longer supported and may have rendering errors. Please update your browser bookmarks and please use the default browser print function instead.

Not to be confused with lymphadenitis.

Background

  • Inflammation of deep dermal/subdermal lymphatic channels
  • Usually due to inoculation of skin flora through wound or cellulitis
  • Non-infectious lymphangitis much less common, typically due to malignancy

Clinical Features

Forearm lymphangitis due to cellulitis of the hand
Another example of lymphangitis

Differential Diagnosis

Skin and Soft Tissue Infection

Look-A-Likes

Evaluation

  • Clinical diagnosis

Management

Disposition

  • Depends on underlying cause.
  • Does not require admission, per se, but increases its chances as a sign of infection potentially spreading systemically

See Also

External Links

References