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Epidemiological aspects of foot and ankle injury in the diabetic patient

OBJECTIVE: To identify the epidemiological profile of patients undergoing orthopedic treatment for complications of the feet and ankles due to diabetes, and to try to establish the sequence of events that led to amputation of the limb. METHOD: The medical records of 300 diabetic patients treated from March, 1997 to July, 2006 were systematically reviewed. RESULTS: The mean age of the patients was 61 years. Of these, two hundred and seventy three (91%) were diagnosed with type II diabetes, but only 49 (16.3%) had proper medical supervision and control of their glycemia levels. Problems affecting the function of the foot and ankle were found in 405 limbs, with: 102 osteoarticular deformities associated with Charcot's neuroarthropathy (34%); 181 chronic ulcers (60.4%); and 97 infected limbs (32.4%). After the average follow-up time, 14 patients (4.6%) died. CONCLUSION: Ulceration of the sole of the foot was the most common complication in our series of patients, the majority of whom were in their seventies, presented type II diabetes, were insulin dependent, and did not have adequate control of glycemia. Loss of sensitivity of the foot, associated with pre-existing deformities, were identified as the main causes of secondary infections culminating in amputation of the limb.

Epidemiology; Foot injuries; Ankle injuries


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