Impact of Podiatric Surveillance on Amputation Rates in Patients with Diabetes and Chronic Kidney Disease.

Stephanie Behme, Christopher Girgis, Brian M Schmidt
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Abstract

Development of the triad of peripheral arterial disease, peripheral neuropathy, and end stage renal disease puts people with diabetes at an increased risk of diabetic foot ulcerations and subsequent infections that often precede lower extremity amputations. In patients on hemodialysis, there is a ten-fold increased risk of amputation and an estimated 40%-82% one-year mortality rate if the amputation is a major amputation. This study aimed to examine if patients presenting to a podiatric clinic with stage 3a or 3b chronic kidney disease and a diabetic foot ulcer had decreased rates of amputations as compared to patients who presented after initiating dialysis. Our results demonstrated all major amputations occurred in patients who did not establish with podiatry prior to initiating HD. Additionally, our study revealed a potential access to care disparity for African American patients with chronic kidney disease, as African American patients were established with podiatry prior to initiating dialysis less often in comparison to Caucasian individuals. Our study lays the groundwork for future work investigating the impact of podiatric surveillance on patients with diabetes and end stage renal disease.

足部监测对糖尿病和慢性肾病患者截肢率的影响
外周动脉疾病、外周神经病变和终末期肾脏疾病三位一体的发展使糖尿病患者患糖尿病足溃疡和随后感染的风险增加,这通常发生在下肢截肢之前。在接受血液透析的患者中,如果截肢是主要截肢,截肢的风险增加10倍,估计一年死亡率为40%-82%。本研究旨在检查在足科诊所就诊的3a或3b期慢性肾脏疾病和糖尿病足溃疡患者与开始透析后出现的患者相比,截肢率是否降低。我们的研究结果表明,所有主要截肢发生在HD发病前没有足部疾病的患者中。此外,我们的研究揭示了非裔美国人慢性肾病患者获得护理的潜在差异,因为与高加索人相比,非裔美国患者在开始透析之前进行足部治疗的频率较低。我们的研究为未来研究足部监测对糖尿病和终末期肾病患者的影响奠定了基础。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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