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Early Outcomes and Complications of Surgically Treated Diabetic Hallucal Infection. | LitMetric

Early Outcomes and Complications of Surgically Treated Diabetic Hallucal Infection.

Ann Vasc Surg

Department of Orthopedic Surgery, Lebanese American University Medical Center-Rizk Hospital, Lebanese American University, School of Medicine, Beirut, Lebanon; Center for Evidence-Based Anatomy, Sport & Orthopedics Research, Beirut, Lebanon.

Published: August 2024

Background: Severely infected diabetic ulcers of the big toe often necessitate surgical treatment. Depending on the wound stage and presence of osteomyelitis, conservative surgery and amputation are the main surgical treatments. Few articles reported the outcomes and complications of such procedures. This study is a preliminary comparative report on the early outcomes and complications of hallucal diabetic foot infection (DFI) treated with either conservative surgery or amputation.

Methods: This is a retrospective comparative study comprising a continuous series of patients admitted at our hospital. Initially, all diabetic foot ulcer (DFU) were infected and at advanced stage (Wagner Grade 3 or 4). All clinically suspected cases of osteomyelitis were confirmed by bone pathology and microbiology culture. The study included 37 patients diagnosed with DFI. Infection profile was as follows: 23 DFU with osteomyelitis (Wagner Grade 3 or 4) and 14 infected DFU (Wagner Grade 2). Twenty-four conservative procedures and 13 amputation surgeries were performed initially. The primary outcome was defined as the frequency of subsequent surgery (deep infection recurrence treated with surgery). Statistical analysis was used to look for significant difference between both groups.

Results: Ten patients (27%) required additional surgeries because of deep infection recurrence. Four recurrences (16.7%) were observed in the conservative group and 6 (46%) in the amputation group (P = 0.054). Amputation rate as a subsequent procedure was 8.3% for the conservative group and the reamputation rate for the amputation group was 23.1% (P = 0.2).

Conclusions: The study findings would indicate that the more severe is the initial hallucal infection severity (higher Wagner grade), the higher is the frequency of early surgical complications mainly after an index amputation procedure. Our assessment tools of initial infection extent seem to be underperforming. A more aggressive treatment in the form of a more proximal cut with regard to magnetic resonance imaging bone infection signal could be considered to minimize the risk of subsequent surgeries and reamputations.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.avsg.2024.01.001DOI Listing

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