Abstract
Lymphedema is a swelling of soft tissues, the result of accumulation of increased quantities of lymph. A useful clinical classification by Allen, Barker, and Hines,1 modified by Duryee,* divides all cases into two main groups; inflammatory and noninflammatory. Lymphedema has been poorly responsive to numerous forms of treatment short of extensive surgery. For this reason, any method which might promise some improvement of the frequently disabling and disfiguring features of this condition, and which is clinically feasible, should be investigated. Hyaluronidase, the "spreading factor," was first described in 1929 by Duran-Reynals.2 Additional knowledge of its biological significance was contributed by

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