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Review
. 2025 Aug;26(8):e13922.
doi: 10.1111/obr.13922. Epub 2025 Mar 27.

Defective lymphatic vasculature in obesity

Affiliations
Review

Defective lymphatic vasculature in obesity

Jingjing Zhu et al. Obes Rev. 2025 Aug.

Abstract

Lymphedema is an important, and often underdiagnosed complication of obesity and is likely due to acquired defects in the lymphatic vasculature. Study of diet-induced obesity animal models have indicated defective lymphatic vasculatures might extend to other anatomical sites, especially visceral depots. Excess mechanical pressure, metabolites, pro-inflammatory cytokines, and adipokines released during adipose tissue expansion can predispose lymphocytes to overactivation and apoptosis; compromising collecting lymphatic vessels; and triggering lymph node hypoplasia, fibrosis, and apoptosis. Consequently, the defective lymphatic vasculature may disrupt local and systemic immune-metabolic homeostasis, contributing to various adverse outcomes including inflammation and immune dysfunction, abnormal transport dynamics of lipids, vitamin D, and possibly incretin in obesity. Weight reduction is the definitive management to restore lymphatic function and should be instituted before permanent vasculature impairment develops. Besides lymphatic regeneration, future research aimed at elucidating the pathophysiological mechanisms between adipose tissue and lymphatic vasculature should be considered to help the development of potential adjunctive therapies that might repair the lymphatic vasculature, improve immune-metabolic outcomes, and even combat obesity.

Keywords: adipose tissue; immune‐metabolic homeostasis; lymphatic vasculature; obesity.

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Figures

FIGURE 1
FIGURE 1
The development and immune‐metabolic consequences of the defective lymphatic vasculature in obesity. In addition to metabolites, pro‐inflammatory cytokines, and adipokines released during adipose tissue expansion, diet may be another significant contributing factor to the defective lymphatic vasculature observed in obesity. These pathological processes are likely driven through multiple mechanisms, as supported by the referenced literature. Consequently, the defective lymphatic vasculature may elicit various adverse immune‐metabolic outcomes, potentially fueling a vicious cycle of further adipose tissue expansion.

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