Hi Alexa! Thanks to the wonders of technology I now know what you look like. I hope you’re all doing well, and keeping good care of your body! So there you have it – the basics of lymphorrhea and how to treat it. When you’re at rest, elevate that sucker! Once the leakage has stopped and your skin is restored, you can don your usual garments again. Don’t forget to change the bandages often, as they’ll become wet and uncomfortable from the lymph. With this added pressure, the leaking should stop within one or two days. Dress the wound with clean, absorbent, non-sticky bandages, and then wrap your limb with compression bandages to help stop the drainage. Then, apply a moisturizing lotion to help heal the skin and protect it from further breakdown. First, you should clean the area where the fluid is leaking to reduce infection. ![]() If you spring a leak, don’t worry – there are things you can do to treat it. Obviously it’s difficult to avoid these things to a T (unless you want to enclose your affected limb in a bubble!), but if you’re careful then your chances of contracting it will be lessened. Also, avoid cuts, bites, and scrapes if you can. Keep it moisturized, as dry skin will lead to cracking and could cause the fluid to leak. The best thing you can do to avoid getting lymphorrhea is to take care of your skin. When this happens, skin grafts are often required. Lymphorrhea is also highly caustic to skin tissue, and when the drainage is left untreated, it could quickly become a large, gaping wound. The lymph fluid is considered a natural food source for bacteria, meaning the wound becomes an entry point for the bacteria to enter your body and cause infections such as cellulitis, lymphangitis, or erysipelas. There are two main complications that lymphorrhea can spell out for lymphies, one of which being infection. Whenever I’ve had it, it drains from an extremely small break in my skin about the size of a pore. Insect bites, abrasions, cuts, wounds, or cracks in the skin can enable the lymph fluid to seep out. The leaking or weeping of this protein-rich lymph is known as lymphorrhea. The light, amber-colored fluid that is beading and trickling from your skin is called lymph. So, without further ado, here is my short-but-sweet guide to lymphorrhea. If you’re anything like me, you’ve been baffled and a little freaked out by your leaking limbs and would like to know what the hell is going on. ![]() It’s occurred probably a handful of times since then, but this past week it’s been happening more often than usual. There was so much fluid that my shoe was completely soaked, and I sat through the rest of the exam embarrassed and silently freaking out, with no idea what was happening or why. I remember when it first happened, during a final exam in my senior year of high school. Since I was around eighteen years old, I’ve experienced the occasional leaking of fluid from my right leg. Edit: we recently revisited this topic in more detail – you can read that post here!
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