Diabetic Foot Neuropathy Flashcards
Complication of diabetes can predispose to foot disease - what are the 2 branches?
- Neuropathy
o sensory, motor and autonomic - Peripheral vascular disease
Epidemiology of Diabetic Foot?
Prevalence of diabetes = 2-3%
Prevalence of current/past foot ulceration in diabetes = 5-7%
o Risk of amputation is 60x higher in diabetes
o 10% of NHS bed occupancy due to diabetes-related problems
How can you test for Diabetic Foot?
Test sensory function via. a mono-filament
o when the filament bends, 10g of pressure applies which the patient should feel
Pathway to foot ulceration?
- Sensory neuropathy
o cannot feel monofilament
o ulcers due to abnormal pressures - Motor neuropathy
o imbalance of extensors/flexors
o SO foot is abnormal in shape
o ulcers due to abnormal pressures - Limited joint mobility
o e.g. cannot put hands flat against one another - Autonomic neuropathy
o NO sweating
o skin dries out
o get ulcers - Peripheral vascular disease
o blood flow compromised to lower limbs - Trauma
o repeated OR minor episodes - Reduced resistance to infections
- Other diabetic complications
o e.g. retinopathy
3 types of foot ulcerations
- Neuropathic foot
- Ischaemic foot
- Neuro-ischaemic foot
Neuropathic foot characterisitcs?
Numb Warm Dry Palpable foot pulses Ulcers at point of high pressure loading
Ischaemic foot characteristics?
Cold
Pulseless
Ulcers at foot margins
Neuro-ischaemic foot characteristics?
Numb Cold Dry Pulseless Ulcers at points of high pressure AND at foot margins
(basically both put together!)
What should you be looking for when assessing the foot of a diabetic patient?
- Appearance
o callus? deformity? - Feel/touch
o Hot/cold? Dry? - Foot pulses
o dorsalis pedis/posterior tibial pulse - Neuropathy
o vibration sensation? temperature? ankle jerk reflex? fine touch sensation?
What must be managed from diabetes perspective in diabetic foot?
o Hyperglycaemia o HTN o Dyslipidaemia o STOP smoking o Education
What preventative management is included for diabetic foot?
o Control diabetes o Inspect feet daily - have feet measured when buying shoes - buy shoes w. lace and square toe box - inspect inside of shoes for foreign things
o attend chiropodist
o cut nails straight across
o care with heat
o NEVER walk barefoot
How do you manage foot ulcerations?
o Relief of pressure
- bed rest (risk of DVT, heel ulceration)
- redistribution of pressure/total contact cast
o Antibiotics
- possibly long-term
o Debridement (removal of damaged tissue or foreign objects from a wound)
o Re-vascularisation
- angioplasty OR arterial bypass surgery
o Amputation
Charcot Foot in non- and diabetics?
Bones orientated in an abnormal way
- deformity due to loss of joint-position sense so lose normal articulations
o PAINFUL for non-diabetics
NOT for diabetics due to sensory neuropathy
What can Charcot Foot predispose to?
Abnormal shape predisposes to ulcer formation
These ulcers then predispose to osteomyelitis
Osteomyelitis - bone infection
Charcot foot - destruction of joints