Data

Detecting sub-clinical change in tissue compressibility and free fluid in the lower limbs of young people living in an LF endemic area in Myanmar

James Cook University
Douglass, Janet
Viewed: [[ro.stat.viewed]] Cited: [[ro.stat.cited]] Accessed: [[ro.stat.accessed]]
ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&rft_val_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Adc&rfr_id=info%3Asid%2FANDS&rft_id=info:doi10.25903/5f221ac564641&rft.title=Detecting sub-clinical change in tissue compressibility and free fluid in the lower limbs of young people living in an LF endemic area in Myanmar&rft.identifier=10.25903/5f221ac564641&rft.publisher=James Cook University&rft.description=SPSS data set for physical measures taken at 3 time points using 4 devices and publications relating to the data analysis.Abstract [Related Publication]: When normal lymphatic function is hampered, imperceptible subcutaneous edema can develop and progress to overt lymphedema. Low-cost reliable devices for objective assessment of lymphedema are well accepted in clinical practice and research on breast-cancer related lymphedema but are untested in populations with lymphatic filariasis (LF). This is a cross-sectional analysis of baseline data in a longitudinal study on asymptomatic, LF antigen-positive and -negative young people in Myanmar. Rapid field screening was used to identify antigen-positive cases and a group of antigen-negative controls of similar age and gender were invited to continue in the study. Tissue compressibility was assessed with three tissue tonometers, and free fluids were assessed using bio-impedance spectroscopy (BIS). Infection status was confirmed by Og4C3 antigen assay. At baseline (n= 98), antigen-positive cases had clinically relevant increases in tissue compressibilityat the calf using a digital Indurometer (11.1%, p = 0.021), and in whole-leg free fluid using BIS (9.2%, p = 0.053). Regression analysis for moderating factors (age, gender, hydration) reinforced the between-infection group differences. Results demonstrate that sub-clinical changes associated with infection can be detected in asymptomatic cases. Further exploration of these low-cost devices in clinical and research settings on filariasis-related lymphedema are warranted.The full methodology is available in the publications from the Related Publications links below. &rft.creator=Douglass, Janet &rft.date=2020&rft.relation=http://dx.doi.org/10.1089/lrb.2016.0021&rft.relation=http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/tropicalmed2040050&rft.coverage=96.058455705644,21.954548758615 96.058448287195,21.954552397007 96.058440019604,21.954553731143 96.058431712146,21.954552630428 96.05842417802,21.954549202608 96.058418154718,21.954543783222 96.058414231838,21.954536902756 96.058412793392,21.954529234719 96.058413980166,21.954521529711 96.058417676005,21.954514541953 96.058423519133,21.954508955454 96.058430937582,21.954505317061 96.058439205173,21.954503982925 96.058447512631,21.95450508364 96.058455046757,21.954508511461 96.058461070059,21.954513930849 96.058464992939,21.954520811316 96.058466431385,21.954528479353 96.058465244611,21.954536184361 96.058461548772,21.954543172118 96.058455705644,21.954548758615&rft.coverage=96.118041750834,22.08331060053 96.072445683249,22.095563967009 96.024994793678,22.094161936803 95.980333905802,22.079241358816 95.942834738497,22.052258843039 95.916167971534,22.015849682193 95.902943933859,21.973572169206 95.904457086424,21.929561461776 95.920559311304,21.888126043763 95.949674410541,21.853325815873 95.988952395362,21.828573185116 96.034548462946,21.816296777501 96.081999352526,21.817701551424 96.126660240393,21.832649609981 96.164159407698,21.859673846585 96.190826174661,21.896123032604 96.204050212336,21.938423586816 96.202537059771,21.982431550517 96.186434834891,22.023839487862 96.157319735654,22.058597994876 96.118041750834,22.08331060053&rft.coverage=Central Myanmar&rft_rights=&rft_rights=CC BY-NC 4.0: Attribution-Noncommercial 4.0 International http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0&rft_subject=lymphoedema&rft_subject=lymphedema&rft_subject=filariasis&rft_subject=indurometer&rft_subject=bio-impedance spectroscopy&rft.type=dataset&rft.language=English Access the data

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Full description

SPSS data set for physical measures taken at 3 time points using 4 devices and publications relating to the data analysis.

Abstract [Related Publication]: When normal lymphatic function is hampered, imperceptible subcutaneous edema can develop and progress to overt lymphedema. Low-cost reliable devices for objective assessment of lymphedema are well accepted in clinical practice and research on breast-cancer related lymphedema but are untested in populations with lymphatic filariasis (LF). This is a cross-sectional analysis of baseline data in a longitudinal study on asymptomatic, LF antigen-positive and -negative young people in Myanmar. Rapid field screening was used to identify antigen-positive cases and a group of antigen-negative controls of similar age and gender were invited to continue in the study. Tissue compressibility was assessed with three tissue tonometers, and free fluids were assessed using bio-impedance spectroscopy (BIS). Infection status was confirmed by Og4C3 antigen assay. At baseline (n= 98), antigen-positive cases had clinically relevant increases in tissue compressibilityat the calf using a digital Indurometer (11.1%, p = 0.021), and in whole-leg free fluid using BIS (9.2%, p = 0.053). Regression analysis for moderating factors (age, gender, hydration) reinforced the between-infection group differences. Results demonstrate that sub-clinical changes associated with infection can be detected in asymptomatic cases. Further exploration of these low-cost devices in clinical and research settings on filariasis-related lymphedema are warranted.

The full methodology is available in the publications from the Related Publications links below.

 

Created: 2020-07-30

Data time period: 14 10 2014 to 17 06 2015

This dataset is part of a larger collection

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96.058439612388,21.954528857034

96.11804,22.08331 96.07245,22.09556 96.02499,22.09416 95.98033,22.07924 95.94283,22.05226 95.91617,22.01585 95.90294,21.97357 95.90446,21.92956 95.92056,21.88813 95.94967,21.85333 95.98895,21.82857 96.03455,21.8163 96.082,21.8177 96.12666,21.83265 96.16416,21.85967 96.19083,21.89612 96.20405,21.93842 96.20254,21.98243 96.18643,22.02384 96.15732,22.0586 96.11804,22.08331

96.053497073098,21.955930372255

text: Central Myanmar

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Identifiers
  • DOI : 10.25903/5F221AC564641
  • Local : researchdata.jcu.edu.au//published/db481e3c3d082ec81e92c3b227dbcae5
  • Local : cc3d169bbaab213bf32a4c460a3af6cd