| Literature DB >> 22396806 |
Claire M Capobianco1, John J Stapleton.
Abstract
As the domestic and international incidence of diabetes and metabolic syndrome continues to rise, health care providers need to continue improving management of the long-term complications of the disease. Emergency department visits and hospital admissions for diabetic foot infections are increasingly commonplace, and a like-minded multidisciplinary team approach is needed to optimize patient care. Early recognition of severe infections, medical stabilization, appropriate antibiotic selection, early surgical intervention, and strategic plans for delayed reconstruction are crucial components of managing diabetic foot infections. The authors review initial medical and surgical management and staged surgical reconstruction of diabetic foot infections in the inpatient setting.Entities:
Keywords: antibiotics; debridement; diabetic foot; infection; surgery
Year: 2010 PMID: 22396806 PMCID: PMC3284273 DOI: 10.3402/dfa.v1i0.5438
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diabet Foot Ankle ISSN: 2000-625X
Fig. 1A clinical presentation of a diabetic Charcot foot with plantar ulceration that will require staged osseous and soft tissue reconstruction.
Fig. 2A clinical presentation of a staged diabetic limb salvage procedure including aggressive initial surgical debridement followed by a partial calcanectomy.
Fig. 3A clinical presentation of a severe diabetic foot infection that necessitates urgent/emergent surgical debridement and/or amputation.