2003-2008年莫尔兹比港总医院糖尿病足溃疡:对糖尿病足有效预防和管理原则的审查。

Papua and New Guinea medical journal Pub Date : 2012-03-01
Jerzy Kuzma, Damien J Hasola, Tom Lino, Osborne Liko, Arnold Waine, Ikau Kevau
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:近十年来,巴布亚新几内亚和其他太平洋国家的生活方式疾病呈上升趋势,包括与糖尿病相关的肥胖。足部溃疡和感染导致截肢是糖尿病常见和可怕的并发症。然而,这些可能是糖尿病患者所有并发症中最容易预防的。几项研究表明,一半的糖尿病足溃疡可以通过教育和简单的足部护理来预防。本研究的主要目的是描述糖尿病足作为一个社区健康问题的规模。次要目的是回顾目前关于糖尿病足的文献,以便制定更有效的预防策略。方法:回顾性分析2003年和2008年在莫尔兹比港总医院(Port Moresby General Hospital, PMGH)外科收治的糖尿病足患者。我们还对糖尿病足溃疡的预防和管理进行了广泛的在线搜索。结果:我们的研究显示,糖尿病足溃疡和感染在PMGH所有手术患者中的比例在5年期间从1.4%上升到2.2%。有趣的是,在此期间,女性糖尿病足患者的比例从三分之一增加到几乎一半。此外,与2003年的54天相比,2008年糖尿病足并发症患者的平均住院时间为35天。文献综述表明,引入糖尿病足科团队服务,以一次教学和/或预防性书面材料的形式对糖尿病患者进行简单的教育,并简要说明糖尿病足的病理和简单的预防措施,使截肢人数减少了一半。建议:引入全面的足部保健教育计划,并为糖尿病患者组织足部专科诊所,可以减少糖尿病患者的床位占用和医疗支出,减少截肢和继发残疾的数量。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Diabetic foot ulcers in Port Moresby General Hospital 2003-2008: review of the principles of effective prevention and management of diabetic foot.

Background: In the recent decade in Papua New Guinea and other Pacific countries there has been an increasing trend of lifestyle diseases, including obesity associated with diabetes mellitus. Foot ulceration and infection leading to amputation are common and feared complications of diabetes. Yet these are potentially the most preventable of all complications in diabetic patients. Several studies have shown that half of all diabetic foot ulcers can be prevented by education and simple foot care. The primary goal of this study was to depict the scale of the diabetic foot as a community health problem. The secondary goal was to review the current literature on diabetic foot in order to develop a more effective preventive strategy.

Methodology: A retrospective study on the patients with diabetic foot admitted to the surgical unit at Port Moresby General Hospital (PMGH) in 2003 and 2008 was conducted. We also carried out an extensive online search on the prevention and management of diabetic foot ulcers.

Results: Our study showed an increasing trend of diabetic foot ulcers and infections from 1.4 to 2.2% of all surgical patients at PMGH over a 5-year period. Interestingly, over that period the representation of females increased from one-third to almost half of all patients with diabetic foot. Furthermore, the patients with diabetic foot complications showed a lower average hospital stay of 35 days in 2008 compared to 54 days in 2003. The literature review showed that the introduction of a diabetic podiatric team service providing simple education to diabetic patients in the form of one teaching session and/or preventive written materials, with a short explanation of diabetic foot pathology and simple preventive measures, reduced the number of amputations by half.

Recommendation: The introduction of a comprehensive foot care education program and organizing a specialist foot clinic for diabetic patients can reduce bed occupancy and health expenditure on diabetic patients as well as the number of amputations and subsequent disability.

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