Diabetic foot infection
Revision as of 21:59, 23 August 2013 by Mceledon83 (talk | contribs)
Background
- 1st key factor is to assess extent & depth of ulcer (typically more extensive than they appear)
- Ulcer depth is important predictor of healing rate, osteomyelitis (OM) & risk of amputation.
- Failure of ulcer to heal by 50% or more after 1 month of Rx is a strong predictor that the ulcer is unlikely to heal after 3 mos.
- 75% of pts hv polymicrobial inf, usu 70% are g+. Severe limb/life threatening inf are more likely to involve g- aerobic & anaerobic bacteria w/ g+. MRSA is incr in freq.
- 50% or more of pts w/ SEVERE diabetic foot inf have no s/s of systemic tox (ie fever, tachy, incr wbc or Lt shift)
HPI
- Ask about recent trauma
- Duration of current lesions
- Associated systemic symptoms
- Prior treatments
Physical Exam
- Determine ulcer location, dimensions, depth, and appearance
- Note hair and nail growth, determine vascular status (palpate DP, PT, and popliteal pulse)
- Probe ulceration note involvement of bone, joint, tendon, or sinus tract formation
- Use sterile probe, if hit bone chance of OM 90% higher
- DM foot ulcer infection presumed if:
- 2 or more of following: erythema, warmth, tenderness, or swelling
- OR if pus coming from ulcer site or nearby sinus tract
- Severe DM foot infection if:
- abnormal vital signs
- Rim of erythema surrounding ulcer or ulcer >2 cm in diameter
- Lymphangitic streaking or signs of fasciitis (crepitus, skip lesions, severe TTP, bullae), or if probe reaches bone/joint/tendon
- Reminder:
- DM ulcers usually occur at areas of increased pressure (sole of foot) or friction
- Venous ulcers usually present above malleoli with irregular borders
- Arterial ulcers usually found on the toes or shins, with pale, "punched-out" borders (typically painful)
- Obtain ABI on all patients with: nonpalpable DP/PT, claudication sx, ischemic foot pain
- Call vascular if:
- ABI <0.4 (severe obstruction)
- ABI 0.4-0.69 (mod obstruction)
- Call vascular if:
Diagnosis
- ESR >40 incr chance of OM 12 fold, an ESR >70 makes dx nearly certain.
- Wound NOT likely to be infected if no systemic sx, no dc & no more than 1 s/s of local inflammation
Treatment
- Abx for mild= keflex or augmentin or diclox or clinda. Abx for severe= unasyn or clinda & quinolone or clinda & ceftaz, add vanco if life threat.
- Focusing Rx on g+ aerobes w/ oral abx (1-2 wk) appears effective for most mild inf. Must eliminate pressure on wound until healed, nd to elminate or decr periph edema. Dress wound w/ warm/moist env after debridement, absorbant drsng if exudate present.
- Recurrence of amp is 50-70% over 3-5 yrs. Overall, 50-80% will heal w/in 6 mos w/ optimal care.
- Goal for best reults is A1c level <7%, BP <130/80, no Etoh or smoking & LDL <100.
Source
7/2/09 PANI
