Examining the characteristic features of lipedema and the usefulness of BMI and WHtR in clinical evaluation

Abstract Background Lipedema is an adipose tissue disorder involving mostly women. One of the most characteristic lipedema symptoms is painful accumulation of adipose tissue in lower and upper extremities leading to disproportion. Due to the disproportionate body shape, it is recently thought that B...

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Main Authors: Monika Czerwińska, Marcin Gruszecki, Jacek Rumiński, Rita Hansdorfer-Korzon
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2025-07-01
Series:BMC Women's Health
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Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s12905-025-03834-9
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author Monika Czerwińska
Marcin Gruszecki
Jacek Rumiński
Rita Hansdorfer-Korzon
author_facet Monika Czerwińska
Marcin Gruszecki
Jacek Rumiński
Rita Hansdorfer-Korzon
author_sort Monika Czerwińska
collection DOAJ
description Abstract Background Lipedema is an adipose tissue disorder involving mostly women. One of the most characteristic lipedema symptoms is painful accumulation of adipose tissue in lower and upper extremities leading to disproportion. Due to the disproportionate body shape, it is recently thought that BMI (Body Mass Index) might not be fully sufficient to identify the weight ratios among lipedema patients and it is suggested to consider replacing BMI with WHtR (Waist-to-height ratio). Purpose The aim of the study is to present the characteristic features of lipedema patients and the usefulness of BMI and WHtR among lipedema patients in reference to symptoms severity, quality of life and body composition. Methods Forty-four women with lipedema were asked to rate their symptoms in a scale from 0 to 10, and to complete SF-36 questionnaire affecting quality of life. Participants also had body composition assessment. Results Participants experienced various lipedema symptoms such as: heaviness in affected areas (97.7%), pain at palpation (100%), spontaneous pain (82%), disproportionate body shape and tendency to bruising (88.6%). The level of pain was strictly correlated with patients’ daily functioning (R = 0.79, p = 1.9*10− 10). The quality of life among participants measured with SF-36 was 57.4/100. WHtR enabled the same group of patients to be divided into three nearly equal groups, while BMI only divided them into two groups. Statistically significant differences could be observed both between BMI and WHtR groups. Conclusion Lipedema symptoms have a direct impact on functioning of patients. Quality of life is decreased among women with lipedema. WHtR should be considered as a tool in identification of obesity among lipedema population.
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spelling doaj-art-00a847a0f08b45fead3c6d811cb2eb172025-08-20T03:45:32ZengBMCBMC Women's Health1472-68742025-07-0125111110.1186/s12905-025-03834-9Examining the characteristic features of lipedema and the usefulness of BMI and WHtR in clinical evaluationMonika Czerwińska0Marcin Gruszecki1Jacek Rumiński2Rita Hansdorfer-Korzon3Department of Physiotherapy, Medical University of GdańskDepartment of Radiology Informatics and Statistics, Faculty of Health Sciences, Medical University of GdanskDepartment of Biomedical Engineering, Faculty of Electronics, Telecommunications and Informatics, Gdansk University of TechnologyDepartment of Physiotherapy, Medical University of GdańskAbstract Background Lipedema is an adipose tissue disorder involving mostly women. One of the most characteristic lipedema symptoms is painful accumulation of adipose tissue in lower and upper extremities leading to disproportion. Due to the disproportionate body shape, it is recently thought that BMI (Body Mass Index) might not be fully sufficient to identify the weight ratios among lipedema patients and it is suggested to consider replacing BMI with WHtR (Waist-to-height ratio). Purpose The aim of the study is to present the characteristic features of lipedema patients and the usefulness of BMI and WHtR among lipedema patients in reference to symptoms severity, quality of life and body composition. Methods Forty-four women with lipedema were asked to rate their symptoms in a scale from 0 to 10, and to complete SF-36 questionnaire affecting quality of life. Participants also had body composition assessment. Results Participants experienced various lipedema symptoms such as: heaviness in affected areas (97.7%), pain at palpation (100%), spontaneous pain (82%), disproportionate body shape and tendency to bruising (88.6%). The level of pain was strictly correlated with patients’ daily functioning (R = 0.79, p = 1.9*10− 10). The quality of life among participants measured with SF-36 was 57.4/100. WHtR enabled the same group of patients to be divided into three nearly equal groups, while BMI only divided them into two groups. Statistically significant differences could be observed both between BMI and WHtR groups. Conclusion Lipedema symptoms have a direct impact on functioning of patients. Quality of life is decreased among women with lipedema. WHtR should be considered as a tool in identification of obesity among lipedema population.https://doi.org/10.1186/s12905-025-03834-9LipedemaLipohyperplasia dolorosaLipoedemaBMIWHtRQuality of life
spellingShingle Monika Czerwińska
Marcin Gruszecki
Jacek Rumiński
Rita Hansdorfer-Korzon
Examining the characteristic features of lipedema and the usefulness of BMI and WHtR in clinical evaluation
BMC Women's Health
Lipedema
Lipohyperplasia dolorosa
Lipoedema
BMI
WHtR
Quality of life
title Examining the characteristic features of lipedema and the usefulness of BMI and WHtR in clinical evaluation
title_full Examining the characteristic features of lipedema and the usefulness of BMI and WHtR in clinical evaluation
title_fullStr Examining the characteristic features of lipedema and the usefulness of BMI and WHtR in clinical evaluation
title_full_unstemmed Examining the characteristic features of lipedema and the usefulness of BMI and WHtR in clinical evaluation
title_short Examining the characteristic features of lipedema and the usefulness of BMI and WHtR in clinical evaluation
title_sort examining the characteristic features of lipedema and the usefulness of bmi and whtr in clinical evaluation
topic Lipedema
Lipohyperplasia dolorosa
Lipoedema
BMI
WHtR
Quality of life
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s12905-025-03834-9
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AT jacekruminski examiningthecharacteristicfeaturesoflipedemaandtheusefulnessofbmiandwhtrinclinicalevaluation
AT ritahansdorferkorzon examiningthecharacteristicfeaturesoflipedemaandtheusefulnessofbmiandwhtrinclinicalevaluation