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Richard K. Bernstein, MD, discusses 19 proven ways to take care of your feet and avoid diabetes-related complications
Scott Brown writes about Denver Broncos quarterback Jay Cutler's life since his recent type 1 diagnosis
Justine Lorelle Blanchard looks at a chilling development among type 1 teens: skipping insulin shots and purging food as a way to achieve rapid weight loss
Beth Morrow follows up on an article we published in May about teens' problems — occasionally fatal — with insulin pumps
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The incidence of limb-threatening ulcerations in diabetics is very high, affecting approximately one in six to seven patients. Non-healing "diabetic" ulcers are the major cause of leg, foot, and toe amputations in this country, after traumatic injuries such as motor vehicle accidents. These ulcerations do not occur spontaneously; they are always preceded by gradual or sudden injury to the skin by some external factor. Preventing such injuries can prevent their sad consequences.
Virtually all diabetics who have experienced ongoing higher-than-normal blood sugars for more than five years suffer some loss of sensitivity in their feet to pain, pressure, and temperature. This is because prolonged blood sugar elevation can injure and eventually destroy all sensory nerves in the feet (sensory neuropathy). Furthermore, the nerves that control the shape of the foot are likewise injured, with a resultant deformity that includes "claw" or "hammer" toes, high arch, and prominent heads of bones at the bases of the toes on the underside of the foot. The nerves that stimulate perspiration in the feet are also affected. This results in the classic dry, often cracked skin that we see on diabetic feet. Dry skin is both more easily damaged and slower to heal than is normal moist skin, and cracks permit entry of infectious bacteria.
Long-term, elevated blood sugar also may cause impairment of circulation in the major arteries of the legs, as well as in the minor arteries and small capillary blood vessels that supply the skin of the feet. In order to heal, injured skin can require fifty times the blood flow of normal skin. If this increase in flow is unavailable, the injury will probably deteriorate, becoming gangrenous, and facilitate an infection that spreads up the leg. This infection may not respond to antibiotics.
Blood circulation to the normal foot can readily increase one hundredfold, if necessary, in order to conduct the heat of warm objects away from the skin. Impaired circulation may make this impossible, and the resultant burn may not even cause pain.
A deformed foot with bony prominences (knuckles of toes, tips of toes, heels, and metatarsal heads at soles) may be continually rubbed or pressed by shoes. This foot is frequently unable to perceive the extent of such pressure and may not heal readily if injured. It can be burned at relatively low temperatures. Impaired circulation likewise can prevent the warming of cold feet so that prolonged exposure to cold can cause frostbite.
The following guidelines are therefore essential for all diabetics, to prevent foot injury and the potentially grave consequences that may ensue:
Put a copy of these instructions in your tickler file so that you can re-read them every few months. Eventually, you should know them by heart.
Copyright 2002 by Richard K Bernstein MD, FACE, FACN, FCCWS
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