Pressure and the diabetic foot: clinical science and offloading techniques.

Diabetic foot ulceration is a common, yet in many cases an eminently preventable, complication that affects 1 in 20 patients with diabetes. Risk factors for ulceration include insensitivity (secondary to somatic neuropathy), high foot pressures, callus formation (a consequence of sympathetic neuropathy and high foot pressures), deformities (such as claw feet, prominent metatarsal heads, etc.), peripheral vascular disease, and most importantly, a past history of ulceration. None of these factors alone causes ulceration; thus, early identification and amelioration of these factors is a primary aim in foot ulcer prevention. A number of therapeutic approaches may help reduce ulcer incidence: these include therapeutic footwear, hosiery, and, potentially, liquid silicone injected under high-pressure areas. In the management of neuropathic ulcers, pressure relief is of the utmost importance, and total contact casting remains the "gold standard" means of achieving such pressure redistribution. The successful management of diabetic foot ulceration depends on a team approach, remembering that ulcers should heal if (1) the arterial circulation is intact, (2) pressure relief is achieved and maintained over the ulcer, and (3) infection is appropriately treated.

[1]  F. Abouaesha,et al.  Plantar tissue thickness is related to peak plantar pressure in the high-risk diabetic foot. , 2001, Diabetes care.

[2]  L. Lavery,et al.  Reducing Dynamic Foot Pressures in High-Risk Diabetic Subjects With Foot Ulcerations: A comparison of treatments , 1996, Diabetes Care.

[3]  A. Boulton,et al.  Multicenter Study of the Incidence of and Predictive Risk Factors for Diabetic Neuropathic Foot Ulceration , 1998, Diabetes Care.

[4]  A. Veves,et al.  Role of Neuropathy and High Foot Pressures in Diabetic Foot Ulceration , 1998, Diabetes Care.

[5]  J. Mason,et al.  A systematic review of foot ulcer in patients with Type 2 diabetes mellitus. II: treatment , 1999, Diabetic medicine : a journal of the British Diabetic Association.

[6]  A. Boulton,et al.  Efficacy of injected liquid silicone in the diabetic foot to reduce risk factors for ulceration: a randomized double-blind placebo-controlled trial. , 2000, Diabetes care.

[7]  Anthony Delitto,et al.  Total Contact Casting in Treatment of Diabetic Plantar Ulcers: Controlled Clinical Trial , 1989, Diabetes Care.

[8]  A. Boulton,et al.  The Association Between Callus Formation, High Pressures and Neuropathy in Diabetic Foot Ulceration , 1996, Diabetic medicine : a journal of the British Diabetic Association.

[9]  J. Mason,et al.  A systematic review of foot ulcer in patients with Type 2 diabetes mellitus. I: prevention , 1999, Diabetic medicine : a journal of the British Diabetic Association.

[10]  A. Veves,et al.  Use of Experimental Padded Hosiery to Reduce Abnormal Foot Pressures in Diabetic Neuropathy , 1989, Diabetes Care.

[11]  J. Czerniecki,et al.  Trends in lower limb amputation in the Veterans Health Administration, 1989-1998. , 2000, Journal of rehabilitation research and development.

[12]  C. I. Franks,et al.  Dynamic Foot Pressure and Other Studies as Diagnostic and Management Aids in Diabetic Neuropathy , 1983, Diabetes Care.

[13]  L. Kaplan,et al.  Injectable silicone and the diabetic foot: a 25-year report , 1991 .

[14]  D. Armstrong,et al.  Off-loading the diabetic foot wound: a randomized clinical trial. , 2001, Diabetes care.

[15]  P. Cavanagh,et al.  The Effect of Callus Removal on Dynamic Plantar Foot Pressures in Diabetic Patients , 1992, Diabetic medicine : a journal of the British Diabetic Association.

[16]  A. Viladot,et al.  Biomechanics of the subtalar joint , 1992 .

[17]  A. Veves,et al.  The risk of foot ulceration in diabetic patients with high foot pressure: a prospective study , 1992, Diabetologia.

[18]  A. Boulton The Pathway to Ulceration: Aetiopathogenesis , 2002 .

[19]  R. Young,et al.  The Prevalence of Foot Ulceration and its Correlates in Type 2 Diabetic Patients: a Population‐based Study , 1994, Diabetic medicine : a journal of the British Diabetic Association.

[20]  J. Bowker,et al.  Levin and O'Neal's the diabetic foot , 2007 .

[21]  A. Boulton,et al.  Benefits of a multidisciplinary approach in the management of recurrent diabetic foot ulceration in Lithuania: a prospective study. , 1999, Diabetes care.

[22]  A. Veves,et al.  The Prediction of Diabetic Neuropathic Foot Ulceration Using Vibration Perception Thresholds: A prospective study , 1994, Diabetes Care.

[23]  D. Armstrong,et al.  Activity monitors: should we begin dosing activity as we dose a drug? , 2001, Journal of the American Podiatric Medical Association.

[24]  C. Abbott,et al.  A comparative study of the Podotrack, a simple semiquantitative plantar pressure measuring device, and the optical pedobarograph in the assessment of pressures under the diabetic foot , 1999, Diabetic medicine : a journal of the British Diabetic Association.

[25]  A. Veves,et al.  The optical pedobarograph. , 1993, Clinics in podiatric medicine and surgery.

[26]  R. DeMatteo American Journal of Surgery , 1916, The Indian Medical Gazette.

[27]  Weight bearing ultrasound in diabetic and rheumatoid arthritis patients , 1995 .

[28]  Effects of felted foam on plantar pressures in the treatment of neuropathic diabetic foot ulcers. , 2001, Diabetes care.

[29]  D. Armstrong,et al.  Continuous activity monitoring in persons at high risk for diabetes-related lower-extremity amputation. , 2001, Journal of the American Podiatric Medical Association.

[30]  L. Uccioli,et al.  Manufactured Shoes in the Prevention of Diabetic Foot Ulcers , 1995, Diabetes Care.

[31]  A. Boulton,et al.  The diabetic foot: the scope of the problem. , 2000, The Journal of family practice.

[32]  J. Griffiths,et al.  The North‐West Diabetes Foot Care Study: incidence of, and risk factors for, new diabetic foot ulceration in a community‐based patient cohort , 2002, Diabetic medicine : a journal of the British Diabetic Association.

[33]  A. Boulton,et al.  Diabetic neuropathy , 2016 .

[34]  P. Cavanagh,et al.  What the Practising Physician Should Know about Diabetic Foot Biomechanics , 2002 .

[35]  E. Chantelau,et al.  Outpatient Treatment of Unilateral Diabetic Foot Ulcers with ‘Half Shoes’ , 1993, Diabetic medicine : a journal of the British Diabetic Association.

[36]  Andrew J.M. Boulton,et al.  The Foot in diabetes , 2000 .

[37]  Failure of reducing lower extremity amputations in diabetic patients: results of two subsequent population based surveys 1990 and 1995 in Germany. , 1998, VASA. Zeitschrift fur Gefasskrankheiten.

[38]  D. Armstrong,et al.  Evidence-based options for off-loading diabetic wounds. , 1998, Clinics in podiatric medicine and surgery.

[39]  D G Smith,et al.  Causal pathways for incident lower-extremity ulcers in patients with diabetes from two settings. , 1999, Diabetes care.

[40]  A. Boulton,et al.  Role of Experimental Socks in the Care of the High-Risk Diabetic Foot: A multicenter patient evaluation study , 1993, Diabetes Care.