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Diabetic Foot Infections Improving Outcomes (or why I’m not going into vascular!). John C. Lantis II, MD Assistant Professor of Surgery College of Physicians and Surgeons Columbia University . Epidemiology. Cellulitis occurs 9 times more frequently in diabetics than non-diabetics
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Diabetic Foot InfectionsImproving Outcomes(or why I’m not going into vascular!) John C. Lantis II, MD Assistant Professor of Surgery College of Physicians and Surgeons Columbia University
Epidemiology • Cellulitis occurs 9 times more frequently in diabetics than non-diabetics • Osteomyelitis of the foot 12 times more frequently in diabetics than non-diabetics • Foot ulcerations and infections are the most common reason for a diabetic to be admitted to the hospital
Epidemiology • 25 % of diabetics will develop a foot ulcer • 40-80% of these ulcers will become infected • 25 % of these will become deep • 50 % of patients with cellulitis will have another episode within 2 years
Epidemiology(of amputation) • 25-50 % of diabetic foot infections lead to minor amputations • 10-40 % require major amputations • 10-30 % of patients with a diabetic foot ulcer will go on to amputation
Pathophysiology • Metabolic derangement • Faulty wound healing • Neuropathy • Angiopathy • Mechanical stress • Patient and provider neglect
Poor Wound Healing • Poor granuloma formation • Prolonged persistence of abscess • Higher rate of carriage of Staph Aureus in the nares • Bullae, necrobiosis • Nail fungi (Tenia)
Poor Immune Function • Poor PMN functions • Migration, phagocytosis, intracellular killing, chemotaxis • Ketosis impairs leukocyte function • Monocyte mediated immune function diminished • Hyperglycemia impairs complement fixation
Sensory Neuropathy • Unaware of a foreign body • Pressure in shoes • Abrasions in shoes • Tears or brakes in the skin
Motor Neuropathy • Architectural deformities • Hammer or claw toe • High plantar arch • Subluxation of metatarsals
Autonomic Neuropathy • Anhidrosis • Dry, cracked skin • Arterial to venous shunting • Temperature regulation disorders
Angiopathy • Can play a primary role • Microangiopathy +/- • Certainly plays a primary role in healing • Pulsatile flow will augment healing
Foot Anatomy • Compartments, low amount of soft tissue, tendon sheaths • Deep plantar space • Medial, central and lateral • Rigid fascial structures • Edema – rapidly elevates compartment pressures • Ischemic necrosis • Infections spread between compartments • Calcaneal convergence, direct perforation of the septae
Microbiology • Infection – invasion of host tissue by pathogens, which elicits a host inflammatory response (erythema, induration, pain or tenderness, warmth, loss of function) • Superficial-confined to skin supeficial to fascia • Deep-invasion of fascia, muscle, tendon, joint or bone
Microbiology • Normal skin bacteria • Coag neg Staph, alpha-hemolytic strep, corynebacteriae • Acute wound • Monomicrobial (Gram positive) • Chronic wound • Polymicrobial (GNRs, Anaerobes, enterococcus, GPCs)
Wound Cultures • Uninfected wound • If concerned about unique pathogen - MRSA • Infected wound • Help tailor and constrain antibiotic therapy • Antibiotic naïve wound – staph or strep alone • Antibiotic resistant organisms
Wound Cultures • Deep space pus – most accurate • Curretage or tissue scraping from the base of a debrided ulcer gives the best information - next most accurate • Cotton swab across the surface is of little utility
Wound Cultures • Staph Aureus – most important pathogen in diabetic foot • Serious infections are usually caused by 3 to 5 bacterial species • GNR – Enterobacteriaciae – chronic or previously treated wounds • Pseudomonas – often in wounds treated with hydrotherapy or wet dressings
Diagnosis • Clinical presentation • Presence of purulence • Pain, swelling, ulceration, sinus tract formation, crepitation • Systemic infection (fever, rigors, vomitting, tachycardia, change in mental status, malaise) • Surprisingly uncommon • Metabolic disorder (hyperglycemia, ketosis, azotemia) • Should be considered even when local signs are less severe
Clinical Presentation • 60 years old • 66 % male • DM 15-20 years • 66 % PVD • 80 % loss of protective sensation • 33 % have lesion for > 1 month • 50% lack – fever, leukocytosis or elevated ESR
Evaluation • Describe lesion and drainage • Enumerate signs of infalmmation • Define whether infection is present and cause • Examine soft tissue for crepitus, sinus tract, abscess • Probe skin breaks with sterile metal probe and see if skin can be reached
Evaluation • Measure wound (? Photograph ?) • Determine inflow • Neurologic status? Sensation, motor, autonomic • Cleanse and debride wound • Culture the cleansed wound (curettage) • Plain radiographs
Osteomyelitis • 50-60 % complication in severe foot infections • Where in the foot is the lesion? • Vascular supply to the area • Degree of systemic illness • Two classifications systems • Waldvogel • Cleary and Mader
Osteomyelitis • Larger (>2cm) • Deeper (>3mm) • ESR > 70 mm/hr • If you can touch bone 90% correlation with osteo • Xray – changes take 2 weeks to occur • Sensitivity 55 %, specificity 75% • Focal osteopenia, cortical erosions, periosteal reaction
Osteomyelitis • Bone (technitium Tc 99) • 85% sensitive, 45% specific • Leukocyte scans • 85% sensitive, 75% specific • MRI • Sensitivity > 90%, specificity > 80 % • Can miss early changes, mis-read evolving neuropathic osteoarthropathy
Osteomyelits • Etiologic organisms • Staph aureus – 40% of infections • Streptococci – 30% • Staph epidermidis – 25% • Enterobacteriaceae – 40%
Treatment • Debridement • Minor- • Remove all necrotic tissue including eschar • Remove all callus • Sharply saucerize the wound • Debride bone • Repeat visits are normal
Treatment • Surgical • “Salvage the foot but not at the expense of the leg or the patient” • Early surgical debridement decreases LOS, improves foot salvage and decreases morbidity and mortality • All necrotic tissue and pus
Treatment • Plantar abscess • Disappearance of the longitudinal arch and skin creases • Foot edema • Central plantar infections – worse outcomes • Wide incision and drainage necessary
Treatment • Antibiotics • Do not improve outcomes of non-infected lesions • In PVD – therapeutic antibiotic levels are not achieved in infected tissues • Mild infection –Topical therapy • Peptide antibiotic Pexiganin acetate 1% cream nearly as effective as oral ofloxacin
Treatment • Empiric antibiotic therapy • Staph • Strep • GNR • Enterococcus • Anaerobes • *Tailor to clinical progress
Treatment • Prospective studies they all work and there really isn’t a difference • Cost is an issue
Antibiotic thoughts • Mild (po) – Augmentin/Levofloxacin (+Clinda) • Bactrim/Flagyl • Moderate (IV until stable then po) • Unasyn or other Gorilla-cillin • Clinda & Levofloxacin • Severe (IV only) • Imipenem • Amp/Tobra/Clinda • Vanco/Aztreonam/Flagyl
Antibiotic thoughts • Duration of therapy • No good studies • Once active infection resolved plus 2 days • Osteomyelitis • 6 weeks • Can use Flouoquinolones and clindamycin