Context: The association of inpatient glucose measurements with amputations in patients admitted with acute diabetic foot has not been described.
Objective: To evaluate the relationship of hyperglycemia, hypoglycemia, and glucose variability during hospitalization with amputations in patients hospitalized with acute diabetic foot.
Design: Retrospective cohort study.
Setting: Academic tertiary hospital.
Patients: We reviewed demographic, clinical, laboratory, and point-of-care glucose data in patients hospitalized with acute diabetic foot in the Diabetic Foot Unit during 2015 through 2017.
Main Outcome Measures: The primary outcomes were any or major amputations during hospitalization. Secondary outcomes included length of hospitalization and in-hospital mortality.
Results: During the study period, 418 patients were hospitalized in the Diabetic Foot Unit and 45,496 glucose measurements were taken. Patients experiencing any hyperglycemia and any or severe hypoglycemia were more likely to undergo any or major amputations during hospitalization. High glycemic variability was associated with major amputations. Peripheral vascular disease (PVD), high Wagner score, and hypoglycemia were independent predictors of amputations. Older age, PVD, previous amputation, elevated white blood cell level, high Wagner score, and hypoglycemia were independent predictors of major amputations.
Conclusions: In-patient hypoglycemia emerged as an independent risk factor for any and major amputations. Although it is unclear whether hypoglycemia directly contributes to adverse outcomes or is simply a biomarker of disease severity, efforts to minimize in-hospital hypoglycemic events are warranted.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1210/jc.2019-00774 | DOI Listing |
Curr Opin Infect Dis
January 2025
Department of Medicine, Clínica Rotger Quironsalud, Palma de Mallorca, Spain.
Purpose Of Review: Optimal duration of therapy in SSTIs - a heterogeneous group of infections - remains unknown. The advances in knowledge of antibiotic duration of treatment in selected SSTIs that can impact clinical practice and published in the last 18 months are reviewed.
Recent Findings: Recent evidence indicates that few patients receive guideline concordant empiric antibiotics and appropriate duration in the United States, although this likely can be extrapolated to other countries.
Front Endocrinol (Lausanne)
January 2025
Department of Plastic Surgery, the First Affiliated Hospital of Air Force Medical University, Xi'an, China.
Objective: Diabetic foot ulcer (DFU) is one of the common complications in patients with diabetes mellitus (DM). In order to find a method to monitor and treat the refractory DFU, the ferroptosis level in DFU and traumatic wounds (TW) was monitored and the difference between them was analyzed. At the same time, this study further analyzed the correlation of ferroptosis levels with DM severity and DFU's healing.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDiabetol Int
January 2025
Department of Plastic and Reconstructive Surgery and Maxillofacial Surgery, Kurume University School of Medicine, Kurume, Japan.
Aim: Patients with diabetes are frequently complicated with diabetic foot ulcers (DFUs) which are vulnerable to recurrence after healing. We retrospectively surveyed the recurrence of foot ulcer and related factors in Japanese patients with DFUs.
Subjects And Methods: Forty-two feet of 39 patients were initially recruited in this study.
Diabetol Int
January 2025
Department of Laboratory Medicine, Osaka University Graduate School of Medicine, 2-2 Yamada-Oka, Suita City, Osaka 565-0871 Japan.
Atherosclerotic peripheral artery disease (PAD), that is, arteriosclerosis obliterans, is pathologically rooted in atherosclerosis, similar to other cardiovascular diseases. In addition to smoking, hypertension, and dyslipidemia, diabetes mellitus is a major risk factor. People with diabetes mellitus have an elevated risk of developing PAD.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPostepy Dermatol Alergol
December 2024
Department of Internal Medicine, Angiology and Physical Medicine in Bytom, Faculty of Medical Sciences in Zabrze, Medical University of Silesia in Katowice, Poland.
Introduction: Diabetic foot syndrome (DFS) a severe complication of diabetes which can result in ulcers, infections, or tissue damage in the feet.
Aim: To compare the treatment effectiveness in patients with DFS using local O therapy depending on the O concentration.
Material And Methods: The study included 50 patients, 24 male and 26 female ones, in the age range between 39 and 84 years, with DFS.
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