AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates the differences in skin structure between diabetic and non-diabetic plantar tissue, focusing on factors like skin thickness and tissue interdigitation.
  • The research examined specific foot areas prone to ulcers using advanced methods to measure various tissue characteristics.
  • Results showed thicker skin in diabetic tissue but no differences in interdigitation or fat cell size, revealing how diabetes affects foot tissue and its susceptibility to damage.

Article Abstract

Background: Diabetic foot ulceration has a complex and multifactorial etiology and can involve changes in the pathophysiology of the plantar soft tissue. In the current study, histomorphological analyses of diabetic and non-diabetic plantar tissue were performed. It was hypothesized that the diabetic tissue would have thicker skin (epidermis and dermis), less interdigitation between the dermis and epidermis, thicker elastic septa and decreased adipose cell size.

Materials And Methods: Two locations of the foot (the heel and the first metatarsal) were examined, both of which have been reported to be locations with a high incidence of ulceration. Stereological methods and quantitative morphological techniques were used to evaluate the skin thickness, interdigitation index, elastic septae thickness and adipocyte cell size.

Results: The diabetic donors had a greater body mass index (BMI) than the non-diabetic donors. The diabetic tissue had significantly thicker elastic septae and dermis. However, no significant difference was observed in the interdigitation index or adipocyte size.

Conclusion: These findings demonstrate that morphological changes can be evaluated histologically to give a better understanding of the pathological changes in the plantar soft tissue with diabetes. These evaluations can then be associated with biomechanical changes that occur in diabetes to provide new insight into how microstructural changes can alter macroscopic properties.

Clinical Relevance: An understanding of the histomorphological changes in the soft tissue in relationship to the location on the foot could help to explain the biomechanical changes that occur in diabetes and the subsequent increase in susceptibility to breakdown.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4227595PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3113/FAI.2011.0802DOI Listing

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