Clinical Characteristics and Outcome in 223 Diabetic Patients with Deep Foot Infections
- 1 November 1997
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Foot & Ankle International
- Vol. 18 (11) , 716-722
- https://doi.org/10.1177/107110079701801107
Abstract
Clinical characteristics and outcome in 223 consecutive diabetic patients with deep foot infections are reported. Patients were treated by a multidisciplinary diabetic foot-care team at the University Hospital, Lund, Sweden, and were prospectively followed until healing or death. About 50% of patients lacked clinical signs of infection, such as a body temperature > 37.8°C, a sedimentation rate > 70 mm/hour, and white blood cell count (WBC) > 10 × 10 9 /liter. Eighty-six percent had surgery before healing or death. Thirty-nine percent healed without amputation; 34% healed after a minor and 8% after a major amputation. Sixteen percent were unhealed at death, and 3% were unhealed at the end of the observation period. Of those unhealed at death or follow-up, 4 patients had had a major and 11 a minor amputation. After correction for age and sex, duration of diabetes < 14 years, palpable popliteal pulse, a toe pressure > 45 mmHg, and an ankle pressure > 80 mm Hg, absence of exposed bone and a white blood cell count < 12 × 10 9 /liter were all related to healing without amputation in a logistic regression analysis. We conclude that although only 1 in 10 had a major amputation, nearly all diabetic patients with a deep foot infection needed surgery and more than one third had a minor amputation before healing or death in spite of a well-functioning diabetic foot-care team responsible for all included patients.Keywords
This publication has 31 references indexed in Scilit:
- Towards less amputations in diabetic patients: Incidence, causes, cost, treatment, and prevention—a reviewActa Orthopaedica, 1995
- A Survey of Lower Limb Amputation in Diabetic PatientsDiabetic Medicine, 1992
- Bacteriology of 100 Consecutive Diabetic Foot Infections and In Vitro Susceptibility to Ampicillin/Sulbactam Versus CefoxitinAngiology, 1992
- Pathways to Diabetic Limb Amputation: Basis for PreventionDiabetes Care, 1990
- Wound Classification is More Important Than Site of Ulceration in the Outcome of Diabetic Foot UlcersDiabetic Medicine, 1989
- Treatment of Diabetic Foot Infections: Wagner Classification, Therapy, and OutcomeFoot & Ankle, 1988
- Impaired Vibratory Perception and Diabetic Foot UlcerationDiabetic Medicine, 1986
- Vascular and Microvascular Disease of the Foot in DiabetesNew England Journal of Medicine, 1984
- The Dysvascular Foot: A System for Diagnosis and TreatmentFoot & Ankle, 1981
- Observer variability in recording the peripheral pulses.Heart, 1968