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Porównanie oddziaływania aplikacji kinesiology taping z zastosowaniem wyrobów uciskowych kończyn górnych w II fazie leczenia obrzęku limfatycznego u pacjentek po mastektomii

Anna M. Opuchlik
,
Małgorzata Biskup
,
Marcin Solakiewicz
,
Ewelina Kamińska-Gwóźdź
,
Tomasz Ridan
,
Anna Włoch
,
Anna Maria Lipińska

Studia Medyczne 2014; 30 (3): 188–195
Data publikacji online: 2014/09/19
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Introduction

Secondary lymphoedema of the upper limbs is one of the late complications in patients after radical treatment of breast cancer. One of the methods of conservative treatment of this chronic disease available in Poland is complex decongestive therapy (CDT). Another method used in the treatment of lymph oedema is kinesiology taping (KT). Both methods are used in an increasing number of cancer centres and other health facilities in Poland. The results of numerous clinical trials [1–9] confirm the effectiveness of the CDT method. Observations of patients are not always based on long-term assessment of the treatment effects. Achieving good results of therapy in the form of a reduction in the circumferences or improvement of the tissue consistency after stage I of the treatment should be maintained for a further period. Achieving stability and lack of progression of the advanced oedema sizes for a period of 6 to 12 months, however, is a challenge for the physiotherapeutic team. Patients do not always follow the recommendations and reluctantly wear compression products in phase II of the treatment. Patients who believe that the systematic use of compression sleeves is troublesome and not very comfortable look for alternative methods. Tsai et al. [10] suggested replacing the uncomfortable garment with KT. They conducted a three-month observation in 41 patients with lymphoedema, who were divided into two groups. In the first group, a method of CDT with the use of bandages was applied, and in the other they were replaced with lymphatic applications of KT. They proved that the KT can replace the uncomfortable compression garments and provide patients with a better quality of life. In turn, Ciesielska et al. [11] and Lipińska et al. [12] compared the effects of manual lymphatic drainage conducted in women after mastectomy with kinesiotaping of the upper limb. Both studies showed a significant reduction in the oedema under the influence of KT applications, and better results were obtained in these groups. However, Pop et al. [13] analysed patients with lymphoedema after a radical treatment of breast cancer, in which KT applications combined with motion exercises and education were used. In the majority of the examined women very good results were obtained for oedema symptoms reduction and improved arm mobility ranges.
To verify these statements, the patients’ own material was analysed to determine whether lymphatic applications of KT can replace compression products, providing patients with stabilisation or improvement of the previously obtained results of the treatment.
It is considered that the causes of lymphoedema are as follows: mechanical damage to the lymph nodes and vessels of the armpit, chronic inflammatory processes, ionising irradiation, or limitation of physical activity of the limb and its excessive overloading with physical effort [14, 15]. Risk factors include constitutional factors, analysed on the basis of somatic parameters, such as high body mass and high values of the indexes: body mass index (BMI), waist-to-hip ratio (WHR), Quetelet, Rohrer, and Pignet-Verwaeck [16]. Establishing a mechanism that is decisive at the origin of this complication can be imprecise, and sometimes impossible. Therefore, ensuring that patients after a radical surgery of the breast are aware of the dangers of lymphoedema should be an important part of the treatment. For this purpose, education of patients and getting them acquainted with the principles of antiedematous prophylaxis are introduced. However, these actions are not always implemented by medical personnel. Dziura and Grądalski [17] observed a low level of education of women after mastectomy, as well as their failure to follow the recommendations they received. In the authors’ own study they assessed whether the patients used the knowledge on preventing lymphoedema and what role this procedure played during the treatment. Because radiation is considered to be a common cause of oedema [14, 15, 18, 19], an analysis of the significance of this therapy in the obtained results of the physiotherapy treatment was carried out.

Aim of the research

The aim of this research was to obtain an answer to the question of whether wearing uncomfortable compression products on the upper limb in the second phase of CDT can be replaced with lymphatic application of KT. It was assessed whether or not the applied antiedematous prophylaxis is important in the course of the therapy. The impact of the implemented complementary treatment on the results of physiotherapeutic management was compared.

Material and methods

The study was carried out on a group of 80 (100%) women aged 60 to 80 years (average 60 years old), after mastectomy, treated for lymphoedema in the Rehabilitation Department of the Holycross Can­cer Centre in Kielce in the period from January to June, 2012. In all the patients the CDT method – phase I was applied for a period of 2–3 weeks. The method involved carrying out daily manual lymphatic drainage (Vodder technique), skin care (applying a caring agent before compression), and compression with the use of applied layers of not very elastic bandages, as well as gymnastics restoring patency, based on active, dynamic movements of the limb (concentric and eccentric contraction) conducted in drainage positions. In phase II – for a month after the end of the first stage, 50 (62%) women – the group of CDT + C – used compression sleeves in everyday life, and in 30 (38%) patients in the control group – CDT + KT – lymphatic application of KT were introduced (compression was applied only in phase I, but not during the time of using KT). The size and the compression ratio of compression sleeves were selected according to the circumferences and the length of the upper limb. In lymphatic applications with the tape K-Active Nitto Denko, the ‘Fork’ technique was used, in which a 5-centimetre-wide plaster was divided into four equal strips. At the length of 5 cm, the uncut part was the base, which was at the same time the beginning of the application. The base was stuck in the site of local lymph nodes or along lymph vessels in the direction in accordance with the flow of lymph. Kinesiology taping tapes were applied on the skin for a period of 4–5 days, and after their use the next application took place. All the patients were interviewed for their personal data, the cancer treatment, the applied antiedematous prophylaxis, the time and causes of oedema, the amount of infection (rose), and the presence of pain before and after the treatment. Preventing the occurrence of lymphoedema was associated with self-reliant and systematic undertaking by the patients of self-massage of the limb, physical exercise, breathing exercises, and putting the limb in a high position, as well as its protection against mechanical injuries or overloads. Physical examination included the following: a visual assessment of the skin condition (colour, keratosis, fibrosis), linear measurements of the upper limbs circumferences, and palpable assessment of the consistency of the limb tissues, which were performed before and after particular phases of the physiotherapy management. Linear measurements were performed with the use of a measuring tape at seven points of the upper limb. A difference of 1.5 cm between the circumferences of at least two points was adopted as a criterion for the diagnosis of lymphoedema. Palpable assessment of tissues consisted of applying the Stemmer test (sign) on the dorsal, proximal part of a phalanx of the II and III finger and the ‘hole’ test – a hollow of a thumb in the area of tissue of the swollen limb [20, 21]. A positive Stemmer sign meant a lack of the possibility to elevate the skin over the fascia, and a negative one meant the correct skin elasticity in relation to the fascia. In the ‘hole’ test, a hollow quickly disappearing from the skin was assessed as level I of lymphoedema (soft or plastic, reversible). In the case of a long-lasting sign on the skin (fibrosclerosis) and the impossibility of withdrawing the changes under the influence of the limb elevation, the oedema was assessed at level II (spontaneously-irreversible, hard). The skin condition, which makes the deformation impossible in this test, testified the hard oedema, irreversible with sclerotic changes characteristic of level III of oedema (lymphatic elephantiasis) [18, 22, 23].

Statistical analysis

For the linear circumferences of the limb in the course of the therapy basic statistics were determined: average, standard deviation, median, quartiles and min. and max. Frequencies and percentages were determined for the analysis of qualitative characteristics (the degree of tissue consistency of the limb and pain). The following statistical methods were applied: t-Student’s test, two-factor analysis of variance, and 2 test. Statistical calculations were done with the use of the MedCalc Statistical Software version 13.2.0 (MedCalc Software bvba, Ostend, Belgium; http://www.medcalc.org, 2014), licensed to the Holycross Cancer Centre in Kielce.

Results

Application of antiedematous prophylaxis was confirmed by 52 (65%) women from both groups, but this was not important for the degree of oedema or the course of the treatment. Chemotherapy and radiotherapy were introduced in the treatment of breast cancer in 60 (75%) patients. In most measuring points of the upper limb circumferences, a statistically significant influence of radiotherapy on different phases of the treatment was noticed. After phase I of CDT, a significant reduction in the limb circumferences in patients from both groups was demonstrated. Comparable results were observed after phase II of the treatment, but in the CDT + KT group the circumferences underwent a slight increase, which was not significant. After phases I and II of the therapy there was a beneficial change in the consistency, from hard to soft, in women from both groups.

Discussion

Lymphatic oedema occurred more often in the area of the upper left limb in the CDT + C group – in 29 patients (58%), and in the CDT + KT group in 22 (73%) patients. Antioedematous prophylaxis was applied by most of the women in the surveyed groups: in the first group – 32 (64%) and in the control group – 20 (66.5%). In spite of the practical implementation of the prevention principles into daily activities, lymphoedema occurred in the studied patients. Complementary therapy in the form of chemotherapy and radiotherapy was introduced in the treatment of breast cancer in 60 (75%) patients. Oedema occurred in 14 (28%) patients in the study group in the period of 1.5 years after the performed surgery. However, 14 (46.5%) patients from the control group reported that oedema occurred in them in the period from 0.5 to 1 year after the surgery. The majority of women in both groups – 18 (36%) in the CDT + C group and 12 (40%) in the CDT + KT group – found that lymphoedema occurred spontaneously, without an apparent cause. Another factor causing its occurrence was radiotherapy – in 11 (22%) patients from the first group and in 7 (23.3%) from the other group. The same number of women from both groups stated that the oedema was due to excessive load of the limb with physical effort. Few patients mentioned the operation – 7 (14%) in the CDT + C group and 2 (6%) in the group CDT + KT and chemotherapy, 3 (6%) in the first group and 2 (6%) in the other group – as a trigger for the creation of this complication. Before starting the treatment, level II of the advancement of oedema was diagnosed, because the average circumferences of the limb with oedema were very different from the limb on the healthy side in women from both groups, especially in the area of the arm and forearm (Table 1).
However, the consistency of oedema before the undertaken physiotherapy management was most often assessed as hard in 19 (38%) patients from the test group and as plastic in 13 (43.3%) women in the comparison group (Figure 1). In the first group, in 17 (34%) patients soft oedema was diagnosed and in 14 (28%) it was plastic. In the CDT + KT group oedema with a hard consistency also appeared – in 11 (36.6%) patients and soft – only in 6 (20%) women.
It was analysed whether the patients who followed the principles of the anti-oedematous prophylaxis obtained better or worse results in the course of the physiotherapeutic management. We assessed the importance of prevention in the obtained state of the limb circumferences in seven measuring points, in different phases of the treatment (Table 2). In the stages of the therapy, and regardless of whether the patients applied antiedematous prophylaxis or not, the same degree of improvement in the upper limb circumference reduction was achieved. Only at the circumference of the elbow joint and metacarpal in the study group was the importance of prevention in the course of the therapy observed. Measures preventing oedema had no significant statistical influence on the state of the limb circumferences during physiotherapy.
Because the majority of the women from the first group – 39 (78%) – and 22 (73%) from the second group during the treatment of breast cancer underwent radiotherapy, its impact on the course of the physiotherapy management was evaluated. The achieved results in the reduction of individual circumferences of the limb during the stages of the therapy in patients with previously conducted exposure to radiation and in patients who did not have this treatment were compared (Table 3). Irradiation had a statistically significant effect on the results achieved in reducing the circumferences of the limb affected with oedema, particularly in the area of the forearm and hand.
The same analysis was performed with regard to 46 (92%) women from the first group, and 24 (80%) from the other, who were subjected to chemotherapy during the anticancer therapy. In particular stages of the treatment, and irrespective of the applied treatment system, the same degree of improvement in terms of reduction of the upper limb circumferences was achieved. Chemotherapy was not a statistically significant factor determining the treatment of lymphoedema.
In the evaluation of the limb circumferences in seven measuring points particular stages of the treatment in relation to each other (before the therapy and after the first phase, and after phases I and II) were compared. All average circumferences in the women in both groups were significantly reduced after the applied CDT – phase I. In Stage II of the treatment in the patients who for one month after ending CDT used compression sleeves (the CDT + C group) there was a further statistically significant reduction in all the measuring points of the limb circumferences. Such an improvement was not obtained in the women with lymphatic application of KT; most of the circumferences increased slightly, although this was not statistically significant (Table 4). In patients from this group stabilisation in terms of the limb circumferences was observed, which demonstrates the beneficial impact of the treatment on the state of oedema.
Examination of the tissue consistency after stage I­ of the therapy in the first group of patients (CDT + C) showed a positive change in comparison with the assessment carried out prior to the treatment. The limb tissue became clearly soft, which means the improvement of the state of oedema. This feature was observed in 43 (85%) patients. Further improvement occurred under the influence of wearing compression sleeves, because after phase II of the treatment oedema of soft consistency was observed in 47 (94%) patients (Figure 2).
Similar results were achieved in the comparison group. Before the therapy the soft nature of oedema was observed in 6 (20%) women, and after phase I of the treatment it was observed in 25 (83%). Later the improvement occurred after the completion of phase II, where a soft consistency was found in 29 (96.5%) of the examined patients who used the KT (Figure 3).
The vast minority of the women reported pain prior to the treatment in the area of the treated limb – 16 (32%) in the group CDT + C and 12 (40%) in the group CDT + KT. In the first group the symptoms of pain in the limb were noticed only in 1 (2%) patient after the first phase of the therapy, but after phase II it was reported by 4 (8%) patients. In turn, in the second group, pain in the limb occurred after the first stage of the treatment in 4 (13%), and after phase II in 3 (10%) patients (Figures 4 and 5).

Conclusions

The applied antiedematous prophylaxis had no significance in the course of the treatment. Introduction of radiotherapy in the treatment of breast cancer had a significant impact on the state of oedema, particularly in the distal parts of the upper limb. Application of comprehensive physiotherapeutic management resulted in the reduction of the average circumferences of the upper limb, a favourable change in the consistency of the tissue, and a reduction in pain in all the patients after phase I of the therapy. Maintenance and improvement of the therapy results in phase II show the relevance of the systematic use of compression sleeves. Lymphatic application of KT does not guarantee a decrease in the state of the limb circumferences in phase II of the treatment, but it has a positive impact on the maintenance of the proper oedema consistency and reduction of pain. They can be an alternative for compression sleeves not accepted by patients.

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Address for correspondence

Anna M. Opuchlik
MD, PhD
The Holycross Cancer Center
ul. S. Artwińskiego 3, 25-734 Kielce, Poland
Phone: +48606713588
E-mail: annaop7@wp.pl
Copyright: © 2014 Jan Kochanowski University in Kielce This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0) License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/), allowing third parties to copy and redistribute the material in any medium or format and to remix, transform, and build upon the material, provided the original work is properly cited and states its license.
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