糖尿病相关后遗症的轨迹,用于确定过渡概率以及预防溃疡、感染和截肢的最佳时间点。

IF 1.3 4区 医学 Q2 Medicine
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引用次数: 0

摘要

为了减少与糖尿病相关的并发症并避免徒劳无益的手术,足踝外科医生需要了解灾难性事件发生的相对时间、发生率以及不同患者群体中糖尿病疾病状态之间转变的概率。在这项研究中,我们按照性别、种族和民族对糖尿病患者的医疗事件(包括最初诊断为糖尿病、溃疡、伤口护理、骨髓炎、截肢和再次截肢,按严重程度排序)和每次医疗事件之间的时间进行了追踪。我们发现,从确诊糖尿病到发生溃疡,下肢不同状态之间的平均持续时间最长,为 1137 天(38 个月)。截肢到再次截肢、骨髓炎、伤口护理和溃疡的平均持续时间分别为 18 天、49 天、23 天和 18 天。女性的每种疾病转归时间都更长,而西班牙裔人群的每种疾病转归时间都短于整个队列。这些知识可以让外科医生根据病人的情况及时调整治疗方案,帮助病人解决、延缓或避免并发症。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Trajectories of Diabetes-Related Sequelae for Identifying Transition Probabilities, and Optimal Timepoints for Prevention of Ulceration, Infection, and Amputation

To reduce diabetes-related complications and to avoid futile procedures, foot and ankle surgeons need to understand the relative timings of catastrophic events, their incidence, and probabilities of transitions between disease states in diabetes in different patient populations. For this study, we tracked medical events (including an initial diagnosis of diabetes, ulcer, wound care, osteomyelitis, amputation, and reamputation, in order of severity) and the time between each such event in patients with diabetes, stratifying by sex, race, and ethnicity. We found that the longest average duration between the different lower extremity states was a diagnosis of diabetes to the occurrence of ulcer at 1137 days (38 months). The average durations of amputation to reamputation, osteomyelitis, wound care, and ulcer were 18, 49, 23, and 18 days, respectively. The length of each disease transition for females was greater, while those of the Hispanic population were shorter than in the total cohort. This knowledge may permit surgeons to time and tailor treatments to their patients, and help patients to address, delay, or avoid complications.

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来源期刊
Journal of Foot & Ankle Surgery
Journal of Foot & Ankle Surgery ORTHOPEDICS-SURGERY
CiteScore
2.30
自引率
7.70%
发文量
234
审稿时长
29.8 weeks
期刊介绍: The Journal of Foot & Ankle Surgery is the leading source for original, clinically-focused articles on the surgical and medical management of the foot and ankle. Each bi-monthly, peer-reviewed issue addresses relevant topics to the profession, such as: adult reconstruction of the forefoot; adult reconstruction of the hindfoot and ankle; diabetes; medicine/rheumatology; pediatrics; research; sports medicine; trauma; and tumors.
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