Author: Mr Chad Chang FRCS(Plast), Consultant Plastic Surgeon
Review Status: Peer-reviewed by Mr John Henton FRCS(Plast), Consultant Plastic Surgeon
Published: 9 April 2026
Quick Summary: Modern lymphoedema surgery is an adjunct to Complete Decongestive Therapy (CDT), targeting the underlying structural failures that lead to clinical plateaus. By integrating real-time ICG Lymphography, surgeons can offer stage-specific interventions: LVA for fluid bypass, VLNT for biological restoration, and SAPL for advanced tissue debulking. This collaborative approach prioritises therapist-led pre-operative optimisation to ensure the “driest” possible baseline, ultimately resulting in measurable reductions in cellulitis frequency and stable long-term volume control.
As a specialist therapist, your work in Complete Decongestive Therapy (CDT) remains the essential foundation of patient care. While CDT effectively maintains tissue health, structural limitations or permanent tissue changes can occasionally lead to a clinical plateau, despite high-quality manual management.
Modern surgical interventions are intended to augment your practice by acting as a functional support rather than a replacement for conservative care. By addressing the physical blockages within the system, surgery improves the tissue environment. This makes ongoing therapy more effective and fluid drainage more predictable.
This guide provides clinical insights to help you determine when a specialist surgical assessment might benefit your patient’s long-term management and quality of life.
What are the main surgical options for lymphoedema?
Understanding the specific goal of each surgery allows for better long-term planning and helps you set realistic expectations for your patients.
| Procedure | Mechanism | Volume & Compression | Cellulitis Reduction | Ideal Patient Profile |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| LVA (Lymphaticovenous Anastomosis) | Bypasses obstructions by connecting high-pressure lymphatic vessels to low-pressure veins. | Averages 61% excess volume reduction. Around 46.3% of patients may downgrade compression class. | 87.7% reduction | Early-stage with fluid-predominant swelling. |
| VLNT (Vascularised Lymph Node Transfer) | Transplants healthy nodes to generate new vessels and act as a biological pump. | Averages 57% excess volume reduction. Improvement typically peaks at 18–24 months. | 1.38 – 2.43 less episodes per year | Moderate-to-late stage with mixed fluid and solid tissue. |
| SAPL (Suction-Assisted Protein Lipectomy) | Removes solid fibro-fatty tissue and accumulated waste to restore limb volume. | Up to 100% excess volume reduction. Long-term stability requires lifelong compression. | 80.6% reduction | Late-stage lymphoedema with non-pitting, solid, fixed tissue. |
Can surgery reduce the risk of recurrent cellulitis?
Recurrent cellulitis in lymphoedema can trigger further inflammation and damage any remaining lymphatic system. By improving the body’s ability to remove stagnant lymph fluid and abnormal fibro-fatty deposits (both of which act as a breeding group for bacteria), surgical intervention can produce a measurable reduction in infection rates.
How can you help your patients achieve the best surgical outcomes?
Surgical success depends on a coordinated approach. There are three key stages where your expertise directly influences the final result.
Why is pre-operative therapy essential?
Patients should undergo a period of intensive CDT before any surgery. Operating on a limb filled with fluid is much more difficult and increases the risk of inflammation. Achieving the “driest” possible baseline is a critical requirement for a successful operation.
How does rehabilitation change after surgery?
Post-operative protocols can vary significantly between surgeons based on their specific techniques, the patient’s unique anatomy, and intraoperative findings. It is important to consult the operating surgeon to verify their specific requirements before you initiate or modify any manual therapy or compression regime, but general recommendations from the Great North Lymphatics Centre suggests that:
- Following LVA: The connections are microscopic and often quite fragile. Aggressive MLD and pneumatic pumps should be avoided initially to prevent mechanical failure of the connections before they have healed.
- Following VLNT: New lymphatic networks can take up to two years to fully mature. Continued compliance with compression is vital during this phase. However, in the immediate post-operative period, compression may be paused or adjusted to reduce the risk of compromising the blood supply to the transplanted lymph node.
- Following SAPL: This procedure removes the solid fat and scar tissue, but the underlying drainage failure remains. Success hinges on precise garment fitting; patients require lifelong, compression to prevent fluid from refilling the newly created spaces.
Next Steps for Your Patients
If you have a patient whose progress has plateaued or who is struggling with frequent infections, a specialist surgical assessment can provide more clarity. We use ICG Lymphography as a diagnostic tool to help guide your ongoing therapy or to determine if a structural repair could help.
Disclaimer: This content is for educational purposes only and does not constitute personal medical advice. Content written by Mr Chad Chang and peer-reviewed by Mr John Henton.
