Friday, January 9, 2009

Diabetic Foot Infection

Today I saw a patient who had a diabetic foot partial amputation only 3 weeks ago. He called the office and said he had a new spot he was worried about. Just earlier this week I had taken out his stitches from the amputation site. He had already been admitted to the hospital, taken to the operation for emergency surgery and then had an amputation.

Today the new spot was a blister right next to the amputation site. He said that his neuropathy causes his feet to feel cold. So he sleeps with a heating pad on his feet. Unfortunately the heating pad caused a second degree burn which since became infected.

So, today I used a scalpel and tissue nippers to trim off the dead and infected tissue. I took some wound cultures from the pus draining out of the blister. That way we can tell what bugs are living in there and causing the infection. I also started him on antibiotics. But his still has an open sore and the potential for another preventable diabetic foot disaster.

This episode illustrates the way additional amputations can happen in a those with diabetes and numb feet. Statistically a person with a diabetic foot amputation will experience re-amputaion in less than 5 years.

In all likelihood, this incident will be less eventful than the last, but it was also avoidable. As with just about every other diabetic foot problem, an ounce of prevention is worth a ton of cure.

Some basic rules:

1. Always check your feet for open sores, red areas or new problems. Check twice-a-day.
2. Never sleep with a heating pad, hot water bottle, or other heat source near your feet.
3. Seek treatment immediately as soon as you see a new sore or detect a problem.

If the antibiotics work, he will stay out of the hospital. If the infection gets worse he will be admitted to the hospital with more of the hideously expensive intravenous antibiotics beating up his already weak diabetic kidneys. If it goes badly he will get diabetic foot amputation #2.

Lets hope for the best.



Dr. Christopher Segler believes diabetic amputations are preventable. He teaches strategies that help his clients avoid amputation. He is also and award-winning diabetic foot surgeon, inventor and author. If you have diabetes, you can learn how to avoid amputation by more by requesting your FREE report “No Leg Left To Stand On: The Secrets Insurance Companies Don’t Want You To Know About Diabetic Foot Amputation” at http://www.ineedmyfeet.com.

No comments: