J Diabetes Sci Technol
September 2010
Autologous platelet-rich plasma (PRP) may enhance wound healing through the formation of a platelet plug that provides both hemostasis and the secretion of biologically active proteins, including growth factors such as platelet-derived growth factor, transforming growth factor (TGF)-β, TGF-β2, and epidermal growth factor. The release of these growth factors into the wound may create an environment more conducive to tissue repair and could accelerate postoperative wound healing. To our knowledge, there are no reports of combining the use of PRP with curative diabetic foot surgery.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Am Podiatr Med Assoc
January 2011
Diabetic foot disease frequently leads to substantial long-term complications, imposing a huge socioeconomic burden on available resources and health-care systems. Peripheral neuropathy, repetitive trauma, and peripheral vascular disease are common underlying pathways that lead to skin breakdown, often setting the stage for limb-threatening infection. Individuals with diabetes presenting with foot infection warrant optimal surgical management to affect limb salvage and prevent amputation; aggressive short-term and meticulous long-term care plans are required.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDiabetic foot disease frequently leads to substantial long-term complications, imposing a huge socioeconomic burden on available resources and health care systems. Peripheral neuropathy, repetitive trauma, and peripheral vascular disease are common underlying pathways that lead to skin breakdown, often setting the stage for limb-threatening infection. Individuals with diabetes presenting with foot infection warrant optimal surgical management to effect limb salvage and prevent amputation; aggressive short-term and meticulous long-term care plans are required.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDiabetic foot ulcers are the most common lower extremity complications of diabetes. Peripheral neuropathy and peripheral vascular disease are the underlying risk factors for diabetic foot ulcers, subsequently leading to infections and requiring antimicrobial therapy for the management of the disease. Each risk factor is a target for clinical intervention, with the intent to delay or prevent disease progression to amputation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNegative pressure wound therapy (NPWT) is frequently employed in the treatment of complex wounds. A variety of wound chemotherapeutic agents such as insulin, which acts as a growth factor, may prove helpful in treatment as well. We present a case report in which insulin was used as a chemotherapeutic agent in continuous-instillation NPWT.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFReducing and preventing postoperative pain are currently a topic of great interest. There are different modalities for providing analgesia that can provide an alternative or adjunct to opioid therapy. One mode of therapy involves the use of portable pain pump devices that can deliver continuous local anaesthesia directly to the site of interest.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNegative-pressure wound therapy (NPWT) is frequently employed in the treatment of complex wounds. The authors present a description of real-time streaming therapy of a variety of wound chemotherapeutic agents through NPWT. Doxycycline, which acts as a competitive inhibitor of matrix metalloproteinases and tumor necrosis factor alpha and further decreases inflammation through the reduction of nitrous oxide production, may prove helpful when delivered in this manner.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF