Correct Answer: B. Lymphatic obstruction
The peripheral blood smear showing microfilariae in an endemic region (likely India, where lymphatic filariasis is endemic) is pathognomonic for Wuchereria bancrofti or Brugia malayi infection. These parasites cause lymphatic filariasis, the leading infectious cause of lymphedema worldwide and endemic in India (RNTCP surveillance data). The adult worms lodge in lymph nodes and lymphatic vessels, causing chronic inflammation, fibrosis, and progressive obstruction of lymphatic drainage. This obstruction prevents normal fluid reabsorption from interstitial spaces, leading to accumulation of protein-rich fluid and progressive limb swelling (lymphedema). The mechanism is direct mechanical blockade of lymphatic channels by parasite-induced granulomatous inflammation and fibrosis, not systemic protein loss or hemodynamic changes. In endemic Indian regions (Kerala, Odisha, Assam), lymphatic filariasis remains a major cause of preventable disability. The clinical presentation of progressive lower limb swelling with microfilariae on blood smear makes lymphatic obstruction the only pathophysiologically correct answer.
Why the other options are wrong
A. increased hydrostatic pressure FMT — Increased hydrostatic pressure (as in venous obstruction or cardiac failure) causes transudative edema with low protein content. Lymphatic filariasis causes lymphedema with high protein content due to obstruction, not hydrostatic imbalance. This is a trap for students confusing edema mechanisms—filariasis causes lymphatic obstruction, not venous hypertension. C. Hypoalbuminemia — Hypoalbuminemia (from malnutrition, liver disease, nephrotic syndrome) causes oncotic edema affecting dependent areas. Lymphatic filariasis does not cause protein loss; it causes protein-rich lymphedema from obstruction. This trap tests whether students recognize that filariasis is a mechanical obstruction problem, not a nutritional or systemic protein deficiency problem. D. Hypoproteinemia — Hypoproteinemia causes generalized edema from reduced plasma oncotic pressure. Filariasis causes localized lymphedema with elevated interstitial protein, not systemic protein depletion. The question's endemic context and microfilariae finding point to parasitic obstruction, not systemic protein loss—a classic NBE distractor for students who confuse edema pathophysiology.
High-Yield Facts
- Wuchereria bancrofti and Brugia malayi cause lymphatic filariasis, the leading infectious cause of lymphedema in endemic Indian regions (Kerala, Odisha, Assam).
- Microfilariae on blood smear in an endemic region with progressive limb swelling = lymphatic filariasis until proven otherwise.
- Lymphatic filariasis causes protein-rich lymphedema (not transudative edema) due to mechanical obstruction of lymph vessels by adult worms and granulomatous inflammation.
- Lymphedema pathophysiology: obstruction → impaired fluid reabsorption → accumulation of protein-rich interstitial fluid → progressive swelling (NOT hydrostatic, NOT oncotic imbalance).
- India is endemic for lymphatic filariasis; RNTCP surveillance identifies it as a major cause of preventable disability in tropical regions.
Mnemonics
FILARIA = Lymphatic obstruction Filarial worms → Inflammation → Lymphatic obstruction → Accumulation of protein-rich fluid → Recurrent cellulitis → Increasing limb swelling → Adult worms in lymph nodes. Use when you see microfilariae + endemic region + progressive swelling. Edema Mechanism Discriminator Filariasis = Obstruction (protein-rich lymphedema); Malnutrition = Oncotic (hypoproteinemia); Heart failure = Hydrostatic (transudative). Filariasis is the ONLY one that obstructs lymph flow directly.
NBE Trap
NBE pairs microfilariae with edema to test whether students reflexively choose systemic causes (hypoproteinemia, hypoalbuminemia) instead of recognizing the parasitic obstruction mechanism. The endemic context is the key discriminator—filariasis is a mechanical problem, not a nutritional or hemodynamic one.
Clinical Pearl
In Indian endemic zones, a patient with progressive lower limb swelling and microfilaremia should be treated with diethylcarbamazine (DEC) or ivermectin (RNTCP guidelines) to kill microfilariae and prevent further lymphatic damage. Early recognition prevents progression to elephantiasis, a major cause of disability in rural India.
_Reference: Jawetz Melnick & Adelberg's Medical Microbiology Ch. 46 (Filarial Nematodes); Harrison's Principles of Internal Medicine Ch. 219 (Lymphatic Filariasis)_