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MULTIMODALITY MANAGEMENT OF DIABETIC FOOT WOUNDS. Martin R. Back, MD Associate Professor of Surgery. Tampa, FL. WHY A WOUND WON’T HEAL. ISCHEMIA - PAD, Buerger’s, Raynaud’s, other EDEMA - Venous insufficiency, lymphedema, cardiac/hepatic/renal failure
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MULTIMODALITY MANAGEMENT OF DIABETIC FOOT WOUNDS Martin R. Back, MD Associate Professor of Surgery Tampa, FL
WHY A WOUND WON’T HEAL • ISCHEMIA - PAD, Buerger’s, Raynaud’s, other • EDEMA - Venous insufficiency, lymphedema, cardiac/hepatic/renal failure • PRESSURE-RELATED - neuropathy, debility/nonambulatory • INFECTION • FOREIGN BODY • MALNUTRITION • COMPROMISED IMMUNE FUNCTION - cancer
DIABETIC ATHEROSCLEROSIS Comparison ischemic amputated limbs in diabetics and nondiabetics - Ferrier, 1967 • No difference incidence occlusive dz popliteal, tibial, pedal arteries • More occlusive dz and calcification of metatarsal and digital arteries in diabetics
ABI < 0.6 less chance of healing
Toe P < 60 mmHg : less chance of healing
DIABETIC ATHEROSCLEROSIS Popliteal / tibial dz - ‘meltdown’ Severe calcific vessels Distal tibial / pedal targets Autologous vein graft bypass over endovascular therapies for multilevel/long-length occlusions Patency equivalent to non-diabetics
OPTIMAL DISTAL REVASCULARIZATION : FEMOROTIBIAL BYPASS WITH SAPHENOUS VEIN GRAFT CONTRAINDICATIONS - advanced / necrotizing foot infections, advanced gangrene in chronic renal failure patients
DIABETIC PERIPHERAL NEUROPATHY Symmetric mixed polyneuropathy • increased incidence with duration of DM majority pts after 10-15 yrs • affects distal lower limbs • segmental demyelination • etiology of injury ? ischemia metabolic (polyol, prostaglandin, carnitine, GF) immune
DIABETIC PERIPHERAL NEUROPATHY MANIFESTATIONS • Sensory loss early dysesthesias and painful paresthesias loss of vibratory sense loss of light touch and pain “stocking & glove” distribution loss of deep tendon reflexes • Motor loss atrophy foot intrinsic musculature pes cavus deformity, hammer toe formation prominent MT heads, migration MT fat pads arch collapse ===> Charcot’s arthropathy
DIABETIC PERIPHERAL NEUROPATHY • Autonomic loss sympathetic (earlier) & parasympathetic loss foot anhidrosis vasomotor dysfunction (AV shunting, orthostatic hypotension) GI, GU dysfunction increased mortality (cardiac, renal)
COMPLICATIONS OF ‘END-STAGE’ NEUROPATHY & CHARCOT FOOT ANATOMY
TREATMENT NON-INFLAMMED NEUROPATHIC ULCERS • No role for antibiotics • Off - loading orthopedic cast shoes, heel ‘cutoff’ sole, crutches total contact cast minimal ambulation / bedrest • Wound cleansing & dressing changes • Debridement / Metatarsal head resection • Topical recombinant human PDGF, other agents • Gabapentin/neurontin for dysethetic symptoms/pain
PRIOR MULTI-DIGIT AMPUTATIONS WITH RECURRENT PLANTAR NEUROPATHIC ULCER -transdorsal distal metatarsal / head resection
TREATMENT GOALS : Control local sepsis (operative) Control systemic sepsis (antibx) Revascularization for foot salvage Staged wound closure / skin coverage
TREATMENT NON - LIMB THREATENING INFECTIONS • 1 - 2 week course oral antibiotics • ? value topical antibiotics • Non-invasive vascular evaluation • Treatment neuropathic ulcer • Frequent, careful follow-up
The Septic Diabetic Foot • ‘a little painful’ per patient, first visit for med care • chronic plantar ulcer not recognized / treated • worsening hyperglycemia • marked leukocytosis • extensive cellulitis medial ankle, malodorous wound • weak monophasic pedal Doppler, palpable femoral pulse
DIABETIC FOOT INFECTION Broad-spectrum IV antibx Aggressive volume replacement (saline) Glycemic control (IV insulin) Cardiac protection, anti-platelet Probable plantar space abscess / near-necrotizing infection = unsalvagable Urgent explore/debride ankle disarticulation staged BKA
DIABETIC FOOT WOUNDS : OUTCOMES SOBERING RESULTS !! NEW SOLUTION = OLD SOLUTION = PREVENTION Education Glycemic control Foot care Early medical tx
MIDFOOT AMPUTATIONS • for failed TMAs, extensive forefoot tissue loss • viable, non-infected plantar surface/flap, no Charcot changes • Chopart/Lisfranc/variant, no Symes • rongeur articular surfaces tarsal bones • divide Achilles tendon puncture incision (prevent equinus deformity) • no wt bearing 3+ wks
77 TMAs in 74 patients 32 healed 24/26 functional amb 41 non-healed TMAs 32 midfoot amp + 6 late amps + 9 early amps 23/25 functional amb + 6 early amps
TOP TENLESSONS / PEARLS / TENETS / PITFALLS • Gangrene = severe ischemia, PAD needs revascularization * * except limited digit gangrene, no infection • For patients with PAD, the worse the infection at presentation or the greater the tissue loss, the more normal the arterial supply must be for foot salvage 8. For severe infections with sepsis, the extent of infection/necrosis deep in the foot is always worse than superficial/skin appearance
TOP TENLESSONS / PEARLS / TENETS / PITFALLS • Urgent / emergent exploration/debridement for septic foot presentations = priority of controlling local infection • For severe infections, use staged debridements/open amps at joints without opening articular surfaces (avoid late osteomyelitis) until final wound closure 5. Prolonged antibiotic therapy is rarely effective for osteomyelitis without resection of bony prominences (neuropathic ulcers) or revascularization for ischemia
TOP TENLESSONS / PEARLS / TENETS / PITFALLS • Symes amputation (or any other resecting calcaneus, talus) is not functional • Creative/unconventional midfoot amputations are functional & less energy expenditure than proximal amp levels (BKA, AKA) 2. Large heel wounds (involving calcaneus) are most difficult to successfully treat
TOP TENLESSONS / PEARLS / TENETS / PITFALLS • The sooner the wound heals / skin closes, the better the outcome … do not pursue prolonged secondary ‘granulation’ healing in large wounds/exposed bone, instead operative debridements and delayed closure !